COVID front-line workers, including ancillary staff, experience negative mental health impacts
A new study published in the leading journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research found that being on the COVID-19 front lines could negatively impact hospital workers’ mental health—even for ancillary hospital staff such as maintenance workers and administrative staff, and also during lulls.
At Israel’s Hadassah Medical Center, more than half (59 percent) of hospital workers reported an increase in stress levels. Further, one-third (35 percent) of those surveyed who were smokers noticed an uptick in the number of cigarettes they smoked each day during the coronavirus pandemic. The study, led by Dr. Yael Bar-Zeev and Dr. Nir Hirshoren at Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HU)’s Braun School of Public Health and Hadassah Medical Center, along with Lev Academic Center’s Dr. Michal Shauly-Aharonov and HU’s Prof. Yehuda Neumark, surveyed close to 1,000 hospital workers between the first and second waves of the coronavirus. Of all the doctors, nurses, allied health professionals, administrative and maintenance workers surveyed, 132 were smokers.
In contrast to similar worldwide studies that focused on stress levels among general populations during the early lockdowns, this new study focused on hospital workers during a relatively slower period—between the first and second coronavirus waves, when the numbers of COVID-19 infections and deaths were low.
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