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Posttraumatic Growth in Self-Referred Healthcare Workers to the Trauma Response Network UK During COVID-19: An Exploratory Study

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ABSTRACT Healthcare workers (HCWs) have experienced inordinate stress and trauma, especially since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. It has also been evident that HCWs have experienced posttraumatic growth (PTG), although the relationship between PTG and trauma symptoms is complex. This study aimed to examine PTG and its associations with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, dissociation, and resilience in HCWs (n = 62) who voluntarily sought support from the Trauma Response Network UK during the first six months of the pandemic. The retrospective design involved bivariate correlations, multiple regression, and a mixed model approach. The study found HCWs experienced moderate PTG (m = 36.11, sd = 23.56), high PTSD (m = 41.58, sd = 17.69) and depression (m = 13.71, sd = 6.64), and low dissociation (m = 7.47, sd = 10.79). Greater PTG was associated with greater resilience (m = 18.17, sd = 8.18; r = 0.542) and lower PTSD (r = -0.265). PTSD was positively correlated with depression (r = 0.590) and dissociation (DES-II, r = 0.411). Results indicate self-referring HCWs showed positive adaptation to the trauma of COVID-19 reflected across multiple PTG domains. Therapists identified facilitating factors that medical organizations can use to enhance PTG in HCWs. Recommendations are made for staff policies that acknowledge growth as a process alongside support for ongoing distress. Longitudinal research is needed to trace PTG, resilience, and symptoms.

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  • Aug 1, 2014
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Contemporary models of trauma suggest that posttraumatic stress and growth should be related and that symptoms of stress resulting from a perceived trauma (e.g., childhood cancer) are prerequisite for posttraumatic growth (PTG) to occur. However, empirical data regarding the relationship of posttraumatic stress and growth have been equivocal. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) and PTG among adult survivors of childhood cancer. Survey methods were used to collect data from 6,162 survivors participating in the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study (CCSS). Nonparametric correlation was examined pairwise between PTG and PTSS using Spearman's correlation coefficient with 95% confidence intervals, with nonlinear canonical correlation analysis being conducted to examine relationships between subscales. A multivariable partial proportional odds model was also fit for PTG total quartiles focusing on associations with PTSS total quartiles while adjusting for sociodemographic and medical variables. Examination of unadjusted PTSS and PTG total scores revealed a Spearman correlation of 0.11 (p < .001), with coefficients ranging from 0.03 to 0.17 between total and subscale scores. The nonlinear canonical correlation analyses resulted in two dimensions with eigenvalues of 0.15 and 0.14, resulting in a fit value of 0.30 and evidence that little variability in the data (15%) was explained by the weighted combinations of the variables. Although statistically significant, these results do not indicate a robust relationship between PTSS and PTG among adult survivors of childhood cancer. Theories suggesting that PTSS is a prerequisite for PTG should be reconsidered.

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