*Five Years Citation in Google scholar (2016 - 2020) is. 1451*   *    IJPR IS INDEXED IN ELSEVIER EMBASE & EBSCO *       

logo

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL RESEARCH

A Step Towards Excellence
Published by : Advanced Scientific Research
ISSN
0975-2366
Current Issue
Article In Press
No Data found.
ADOBE READER

(Require Adobe Acrobat Reader to open, If you don't have Adobe Acrobat Reader)

Index Page 1
Click here to Download
IJPR 9[3] July - September 2017 Special Issue

July - September 9[3] 2017

Click to download
 

Article Detail

Label
Label
Insomnia, Depression and Anxiety among Healthcare workers during Covid-19 Pandemic - An EvidenceBased Review

Author: MUOKA CHIDIEBERE JEPHTHA, JAGADEESAN M
Abstract: Background:Covid-19 is a serious lower respiratory infection leading to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)caused by a novel coronavirus that began spreading from Wuhan, China in December 2019 distributed worldwide. Due to the outbreak of COVID-19, Healthcare workers have been experiencing severe mental health illness like Depression and Anxiety and Insomnia. This evidence-based study Conducted to determine the prevalence of Insomnia, Depression and Anxiety amongst healthcare workers during COVID-19 pandemic. Materials and Methods:Theevidence-based review is done based on the studies conducted from January to May 2020. From ScienceDirect and PubMed were collected thecross-sectional studies with the keywords of Boolean operators “Anxiety” AND “Depression” AND “Insomnia” AND “Healthcare Workers” AND “Covid-19” AND “Coronavirus” AND “Pandemic”. Result: A total number to 159 studies were collected after the keywords search. After the exclusion of 149 studies, ten studies were included. The total number of health care workers who were involved in this study is 15982 of which 5849 (36.6%) were Physicians, 7590 (47.49%) were nurses, and 2542 (15.91%)are other health care workers. 1631 (10.27%), 5567 (34.83%), and 4344 (27.18%) healthcare workers had symptoms of Insomnia, Depression, and Anxiety, respectively. Conclusion: Significant number of health care workers are affected by mental illness in all the affected countries irrespective of their age, gender and profession. Hence all the respective organizations and individual health care workers can prepare and follow the precautions recommended by various authorities to preventHCW from mental illness.
Keyword: Insomnia, Depression, Anxiety, Health care workers, Covid-19, Coronavirus, Pandemic
DOI: https://doi.org/10.31838/ijpr/2021.13.02.007
Download: Request For Article
 




ONLINE SUBMISSION
USER LOGIN
Username
Password
Login | Register
News & Events
SCImago Journal & Country Rank

Terms and Conditions
Disclaimer
Refund Policy
Instrucations for Subscribers
Privacy Policy

Copyrights Form

0.12
2018CiteScore
 
8th percentile
Powered by  Scopus
Google Scholar

hit counters free