Abstract

The COVID-19 outbreak has affected healthcare across all levels. Older adults and those with chronic illness are at greatest risk for infection complications and mortality, which presents significant psychological distress for residential healthcare workers. The concept of selfobject needs, consisting of Mirroring, Idealizing, and Twinship, may be relevant in explaining psychological distress. This study seeks to enhance our understanding of the needs of healthcare workers responsible for elderly patients and evaluate the role of psychosocial support through selfobject needs to mitigate the effects of trauma during the pandemic. Participants (N = 103) employed in residential healthcare facilities in the metropolitan Detroit, MI (USA) region completed an online survey during the peak initial infection. Assessments included standardized measures of trauma-related symptoms, depression, anxiety, and general distress symptoms, as well as a validated measure of selfobject needs. Residential healthcare workers reported mental health symptoms across domains, including clinical elevations in symptoms of trauma, depression, and anxiety. Selfobject needs and mental health outcomes were positively correlated, indicating that greater unmet relational need was associated with greater severity of symptoms. Greater trauma symptom severity as a proxy index of current experience during the pandemic predicted high depressive symptoms, and greater Mirroring need worsened the effect. These results suggest that interventions targeting selfobject needs, specifically Mirroring, may be effective at mitigating acute mental health symptoms among healthcare workers during a distressing event.

Highlights

  • The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States created a crisis across all levels of healthcare

  • The current study aimed to evaluate the role of selfobject needs, a personality construct that is reflective of the psychological need for interpersonal connection, in modifying anxiety and depression symptom severity related to trauma symptoms in residential healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • The current study addresses this in a sample of residential healthcare workers in the metropolitan Detroit, Michigan (USA) region during the initial peak COVID-19 infection

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Summary

Introduction

The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States created a crisis across all levels of healthcare. Mental Health in Residential Healthcare [1, 2] These concerns were amplified in residential healthcare, consisting of nursing homes, assisted living communities, and inhome healthcare that provide long-term and post-acute recovery care for some of the highest-risk populations, including older adults and those with chronic medical conditions [1, 3]. These challenges faced by providers within residential healthcare were compounded by insufficient staff, depleted supplies, transfer of new patients to these services, and patients whose physical and psychological welfare were deteriorating due to the crisis [4]. The current study aimed to evaluate the role of selfobject needs, a personality construct that is reflective of the psychological need for interpersonal connection, in modifying anxiety and depression symptom severity related to trauma symptoms in residential healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic

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