COVID 19: Psychological Effects and Associated Factors in Mexican Nurses

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Abstract

Objectives: The present study examined the psychological effects and identify factors associated with worse outcomes, during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak in Mexican nurses involved in fighting against COVID-19. Methods: An anonymous online questionnaire was applied through an online survey, which collected information regarding basic information, traumatic distress response (IES-R scale), emotional exhaustion (MBI-EE), and psychological distress (K10 scale). Results: Results showed that 46.72% of nurses reported moderate-severe traumatic distress response, 42.40% of nurses evidenced a high level of emotional exhaustion, and 41.78% showed moderate-severe psychological distress. Nurses who have >2 children, an increase in working hours due to COVID-19, increase in tobacco and alcohol consumption, and presence of a confirmed and suspected case of COVID-19 in their workplace showed worse outcomes. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that a large portion of nurses in Mexico is suffering from psychological disturbances due to the COVID-19 outbreak. In the face of a health crisis, not seen in several years in Mexico, the proper psychological well-being of the nursing staff at this vulnerable time is essential.

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Cortés-Álvarez, N. Y., & Vuelvas-Olmos, C. R. (2022). COVID 19: Psychological Effects and Associated Factors in Mexican Nurses. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, 16(4), 1377–1383. https://doi.org/10.1017/dmp.2020.495

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