Abstract

BackgroundLaboratory viral nucleic acid testing (NAT), such as the nasopharyngeal swab test, is now recommended as the gold standard for the diagnosis of Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19). However, the nasopharyngeal swab testing process may cause some discomfort.ObjectiveTo investigate the influence of nasopharyngeal swab tests on the anxiety and pain felt by psychiatric medical staff.MethodsA total of 174 psychiatric medical staff (namely 97 doctors, 68 nurses, and nine administrators) and 27 controls were included in the current study. A self-designed questionnaire was used to collect their general demographic information (age, gender, marriage, occupation, profession, smoking history, alcohol consumption history, tea drinking history, previous history of anxiety and depression) as well as their subjective experience, such as nausea, vomiting, coughing, worry, fear, etc, during nasopharyngeal swab collection. The Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) and the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) were used to assess the subjects’ pain and state anxiety, respectively.ResultsThere were no statistical differences (p>0.05) in age, marriage, smoking history, a history of anxiety and depression, pain scores, and anxiety scores between different professions and genders. The results of partial correlation analysis (controlled for gender and history of depression or anxiety) indicated that the male gender was negatively correlated with being anxious (r=-0.148, p=0.037) and nervous (r=-0.171 p=0.016), although there was no significant difference in pain and anxiety between men and women. In addition, marriage might help women resist negative emotions.Conclusions1) There will be mild discomfort during nucleic acid testing, but not enough to cause pain and anxiety; 2) women are more likely to be anxious and nervous during the nucleic acid testing.

Highlights

  • Coronavirus disease-2019(COVID-19) has been spreading globally since the end of 2019

  • 97 were doctors, which accounted for 48.3%, 68(33.8%) were nurses, nine (4.5%) were administrators, and 27(13.4%) were others. 118 (58.7%) felt nausea, 109(54.2%)felt nervous, 80(39.8%) felt anxious, 34(16.9%) coughed, 22 (10.9%) vomited, 5(2.5%) felt bronchospasm, 7(3.5%) felt dyspnea, and 7(3.5%) worried about pharyngeal infection

  • There were statistical differences (p0.05) in age, marriage, smoking history, a history of anxiety and depression, pain scores and anxiety scores

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Summary

Introduction

Coronavirus disease-2019(COVID-19) has been spreading globally since the end of 2019. Laboratory viral nucleic acid testing (NAT), such as the nasopharyngeal swab test, is recommended as the gold standard for the diagnosis of COVID19 (Pan et al, 2020), and it has proven to be one of the most quickly established laboratory diagnosis methods in a novel viral pandemic, which can serve efficiently to confirm COVID-19 infection within 2 h (Liu et al, 2020). There have been no studies exploring the severity of discomfort caused by nasopharyngeal swab tests and their associated factors We conducted this cross-sectional study to examine the level of discomfort associated with the detection of COVID-19 by nasopharyngeal swabs among Chinese psychiatric medical staff. Laboratory viral nucleic acid testing (NAT), such as the nasopharyngeal swab test, is recommended as the gold standard for the diagnosis of Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19). The nasopharyngeal swab testing process may cause some discomfort

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