Elsevier

General Hospital Psychiatry

Volume 68, January–February 2021, Pages 90-96
General Hospital Psychiatry

Anxiety among front-line health-care workers supporting patients with COVID-19: A global survey

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2020.12.010Get rights and content

Abstract

Objective

We aimed to explore anxiety status across a broad range of HCWs supporting patients with COVID-19 in different global regions.

Method

This was an international online survey in which participation was on voluntary basis and data were submitted via Google Drive, across a two-week period starting from March 18, 2020. The Beck Anxiety Inventory was used to quantify the level of anxiety.

Results

1416 HCWs (70.8% medical doctors, 26.2% nurses) responded to the survey from 75 countries. The distribution of anxiety levels was: normal/minimal (n = 503, 35.5%), low (n = 390, 27.5%); moderate (n = 287, 20.3%), and severe (n = 236, 16.7%). According to multiple generalized linear model, female gender (p = 0.001), occupation (ie, being a nurse dealing directly with patients with COVID-19 [p = 0.017]), being younger (p = 0.001), reporting inadequate knowledge on COVID-19 (p = 0.005), having insufficient personal protective equipment (p = 0.001) and poor access to hand sanitizers or liquid soaps (p = 0.008), coexisting chronic disorders (p = 0.001) and existing mental health problems (p = 0.001), and higher income of countries where HCWs lived (p = 0.048) were significantly associated with increased anxiety.

Conclusions

Front-line HCWs, regardless of the levels of COVID-19 transmission in their country, are anxious when they do not feel protected. Our findings suggest that anxiety could be mitigated ensuring sufficient levels of protective personal equipment alongside greater education and information.

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2
Coronavirus disease
Protective personal equipment
Workers health
Pandemics

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