Abstract

COVID-19 was first reported in China and later spread across the world causing panic because there is no cure for it. The pandemic has adversely affected frontline health workers and patients, owing to poor preparedness. The study explored the triggers of mental health problems among frontline healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. An exploratory qualitative approach was utilised in the study. Forty individual semi-structured interviews were held with frontline healthcare workers. A thematic approach underpinned by some aspects of interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) and the Silences Framework (SF) was utilised. The research found that triggers of mental health problems among frontline health workers in private care homes and domiciliary care agencies are fear of infection and infecting others, lack of recognition/disparity between National Health Service (NHS) and social care, lack of guidance, unsafe hospital discharge, death and loss of professionals and residents, unreliable testing and delayed results and shortage of staff. It is important to support frontline workers in private care homes and domiciliary care agencies.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 has claimed at least 302,115 lives since its outbreak in China in December 2019 (European Centre for Disease Prevention & Control, 2020)

  • The research found that triggers of mental health problems among frontline health workers in private care homes and domiciliary care agencies are fear of infection and infecting others, lack of recognition/disparity between National Health Service (NHS) and social care, lack of guidance, unsafe hospital discharge, death and loss of professionals and residents, unreliable testing and delayed results and shortage of staff

  • Given that most COVID-19 cases were being looked after in care homes and domiciliary care settings, this study explored triggers of mental health problems among frontline healthcare professionals

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

COVID-19 has claimed at least 302,115 lives since its outbreak in China in December 2019 (European Centre for Disease Prevention & Control, 2020). Given that most COVID-19 cases were being looked after in care homes and domiciliary care settings, this study explored triggers of mental health problems among frontline healthcare professionals. It was important to recruit a heterogeneous sample with respect to the length of time they had spent working in nursing and residential healthcare or domiciliary care to elicit shared understanding of the life before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Those individuals who had agreed to take part in the research study had their names and telephone contacts forwarded to the researchers to organise interview dates and time.

| METHODOLOGY
| Ethical considerations
| Limitations of the study
| CONCLUSION
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