Abstract

Mental health and coping difficulties among health care workers (HCWs) have been reported during pandemics and particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. To examine sources of distress and concern for HCWs in Canada during the COVID-19 pandemic. In this qualitative study, a critical discourse analysis was performed of questions posed by HCWs to hospital senior leadership between March 16, 2020, and December 1, 2020, through an online employee forum as part of a larger mixed-methods evaluation of a stepped-care mental health support program for HCWs at 1 of Canada's largest health care institutions. Questions could be submitted online anonymously in advance of the virtual forums on COVID-19 by any of the University Health Network's 21 555 employees, and staff members were able to anonymously endorse questions by upvoting, indicating that an already posed question was of interest. Themes, text structure, and rhetorical devices used within the questions were analyzed, taking into consideration their larger institutional and societal context. Unique individual views of the forums ranged from 2062 to 7213 during the study period. Major individual-level concerns related to risks of contamination and challenges coping with increased workloads as a result of the pandemic intersected with institutional-level challenges, such as feeling or being valued within the health care setting and long-standing stratifications between types of HCWs. Concerns were frequently reported in terms of calls for clarity or demands for transparency from the institutional leadership. The findings of this qualitative study suggest that larger institutional-level and structural concerns need to be addressed if HCWs are to be engaged in support and coping programs. Potential service users may be dissuaded from seeing their needs as being met by workplace mental health interventions that solely relate to individual-level concerns.

Highlights

  • With ongoing social and economic restrictions, stay-at-home orders, and an increasingly burdened health care system, the COVID-19 pandemic has been an affront to the mental well-being of many individuals.[1,2] Among health care workers (HCWs), adverse psychological outcomes, including anxiety, depression, insomnia, and burnout, have been widely reported.[3,4] In areas with high COVID-19 exposure and case volume, HCWs are especially likely to experience distress.[5]

  • Major individual-level concerns related to risks of contamination and challenges coping with increased workloads as a result of the pandemic intersected with institutional-level challenges, such as feeling or being valued within the health care setting and long-standing stratifications between types of HCWs

  • Concerns were frequently reported in terms of calls for clarity or demands for transparency from the institutional leadership. The findings of this qualitative study suggest that larger institutional-level and structural concerns need to be addressed if HCWs are to be engaged in support and coping programs

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Summary

Introduction

With ongoing social and economic restrictions, stay-at-home orders, and an increasingly burdened health care system, the COVID-19 pandemic has been an affront to the mental well-being of many individuals.[1,2] Among health care workers (HCWs), adverse psychological outcomes, including anxiety, depression, insomnia, and burnout, have been widely reported.[3,4] In areas with high COVID-19 exposure and case volume, HCWs are especially likely to experience distress.[5].

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