Assessment of Physicians' Willingness to Work with Patients Not Yet Diagnosed with COVID-19 in a Romanian Sample.

COVID-19 personal protective equipment physicians’ perceptions willingness to work

Journal

Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland)
ISSN: 2227-9032
Titre abrégé: Healthcare (Basel)
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101666525

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
10 Jan 2024
Historique:
received: 26 10 2023
revised: 28 12 2023
accepted: 08 01 2024
medline: 23 1 2024
pubmed: 23 1 2024
entrez: 23 1 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The risk to physicians who worked with patients without confirmed COVID-19 testing during the pandemic has been little studied. However, they were at high risk. In the summer of 2020, 1285 Romanian physicians participated in a single-center study. Participants (mean age = 48.21 years; 302 males and 982 females, all specialties) completed a series of single-item measures adapted from previous studies on work ethics and responsibility. This study used Mann-Whitney comparisons between physicians who reported that they knowingly had direct contact with COVID patients and those who did not regarding their willingness to work. Compared with their colleagues, physicians who reported not knowingly having direct contact with COVID patients reported less access to protective equipment, less overall willingness to respond when asked to work with infected patients, more likely to work out of fear of losing their jobs, and fear of legal repercussions. They received less training in the use of protective equipment. Physicians who worked with patients not yet diagnosed with COVID-19 were significantly less willing to work. The perception of invisible risk may explain the observed differences.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
The risk to physicians who worked with patients without confirmed COVID-19 testing during the pandemic has been little studied. However, they were at high risk.
METHODS METHODS
In the summer of 2020, 1285 Romanian physicians participated in a single-center study. Participants (mean age = 48.21 years; 302 males and 982 females, all specialties) completed a series of single-item measures adapted from previous studies on work ethics and responsibility. This study used Mann-Whitney comparisons between physicians who reported that they knowingly had direct contact with COVID patients and those who did not regarding their willingness to work.
RESULTS RESULTS
Compared with their colleagues, physicians who reported not knowingly having direct contact with COVID patients reported less access to protective equipment, less overall willingness to respond when asked to work with infected patients, more likely to work out of fear of losing their jobs, and fear of legal repercussions. They received less training in the use of protective equipment.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Physicians who worked with patients not yet diagnosed with COVID-19 were significantly less willing to work. The perception of invisible risk may explain the observed differences.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38255050
pii: healthcare12020161
doi: 10.3390/healthcare12020161
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Tudor-Ștefan Rotaru (TȘ)

Department of Bioethics, University of Medicine and Pharmacy "Gr. T. Popa" Iași, 700115 Iași, Romania.

Daniela Cojocaru (D)

Department of Sociology and Social Work, University "Alexandru Ioan Cuza" of Iași, 700506 Iași, Romania.

Ștefan Cojocaru (Ș)

Department of Sociology and Social Work, University "Alexandru Ioan Cuza" of Iași, 700506 Iași, Romania.

Ovidiu Alexinschi (O)

Department IIIA, "Socola" Institute of Psychiatry, 700282 Iași, Romania.

Aida Puia (A)

Department of Community Medicine, "Iuliu Hațieganu" University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 400347 Cluj-Napoca, Romania.

Liviu Oprea (L)

Department of Bioethics, University of Medicine and Pharmacy "Gr. T. Popa" Iași, 700115 Iași, Romania.

Classifications MeSH