Abstract

The novel coronavirus disease, COVID-19, is a highly contagious infectious disease declared by the World Health Organization to be a pandemic and a global public health emergency. During outbreaks, health care workers are submitted to an enormous emotional burden as they must balance the fundamental “duty to treat” with their parallel duties to family and loved ones. The aims of our study were to evaluate disease perceptions, levels of stress, emotional distress, and coping strategies among medical staff (COVID-19 versus non-COVID-19 departments) in a tertiary pulmonology teaching hospital in the first month after the outbreak of COVID-19. One hundred and fifteen health care workers completed four validated questionnaires (the brief illness perception questionnaire, perceived stress scale, the profile of emotional distress emotional, and the cognitive coping evaluation questionnaire) that were afterwards interpreted by one psychologist. There was a high level of stress and psychological distress among health care workers in the first month after the pandemic outbreak. Interestingly, there were no differences between persons that worked in COVID-19 departments versus those working in non-COVID-19 departments. Disease perceptions and coping mechanisms were similar in the two groups. As coping mechanisms, refocusing on planning and positive reappraisal were used more than in the general population. There is no difference in disease perceptions, levels of stress, emotional distress, and coping strategies in medical staff handling COVID-19 patients versus those staff who were not handling COVID-19 patients in the first month after the pandemic outbreak.

Highlights

  • The outbreak of COVID-19, caused by a new coronavirus known as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), was discovered for the first time in December 2019 in Wuhan (China) and spread rapidly in almost all regions of the globe.The World Health Organization (WHO) declared in March the COVID-19 pandemic a global public health emergency [1]

  • The present study aims are to evaluate disease perceptions, level of stress, emotional distress, and coping strategies for dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic among healthcare workers from pulmonology teaching hospital from

  • Our study evaluated disease perceptions, perceived stress, emotional distress, and coping strategies in the first month of the COVID-19 pandemic among health care workers in a teaching pulmonology hospital from Cluj-Napoca, Romania

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Summary

Introduction

The outbreak of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019), caused by a new coronavirus known as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), was discovered for the first time in December 2019 in Wuhan (China) and spread rapidly in almost all regions of the globe. The World Health Organization (WHO) declared in March the COVID-19 pandemic a global public health emergency [1]. In the last few years, the international community has experienced a frightening public health emergency on a global scale, with the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) [2]. In 2009, during the SARS epidemic, the necessity of understanding the possible psychosocial impacts of an outbreak with an transmitted, rapidly spreading infectious disease among health care professionals [5]. Health care providers must balance the fundamental “duty to treat”

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