Anxiety, pandemic‐related stress and resilience among physicians during the COVID‐19 pandemic

Background Physicians play a crucial frontline role in the COVID‐19 pandemic, which may involve high levels of anxiety. We aimed to investigate the association between pandemic‐related stress factors (PRSF) and anxiety and to evaluate the potential effect of resilience on anxiety among physicians. M...

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Published inDepression and anxiety Vol. 37; no. 10; pp. 965 - 971
Main Authors Mosheva, Mariela, Hertz‐Palmor, Nimrod, Dorman Ilan, Shirel, Matalon, Noam, Pessach, Itai M., Afek, Arnon, Ziv, Amitai, Kreiss, Yitshak, Gross, Raz, Gothelf, Doron
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.10.2020
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:Background Physicians play a crucial frontline role in the COVID‐19 pandemic, which may involve high levels of anxiety. We aimed to investigate the association between pandemic‐related stress factors (PRSF) and anxiety and to evaluate the potential effect of resilience on anxiety among physicians. Methods A self‐report digital survey was completed by 1106 Israeli physicians (564 males and 542 females) during the COVID‐19 outbreak. Anxiety was measured by the 8‐item version of the Patient‐Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System. Resilience was evaluated by the 10‐item Connor–Davidson Resilience Scale. Stress was assessed using a PRSF inventory. Results Physicians reported high levels of anxiety with a mean score of 59.20 ± 7.95. We found an inverse association between resilience and anxiety. Four salient PRSF (mental exhaustion, anxiety about being infected, anxiety infecting family members, and sleep difficulties) positively associated with anxiety scores. Conclusions Our study identified specific PRSF including workload burden and fear of infection that are associated with increased anxiety and resilience that is associated with reduced anxiety among physicians.
Bibliography:Raz Gross and Doron Gothelf are senior authors with equal contribution.
Mariela Mosheva and Nimrod Hertz‐Palmor contributed equally as first author.
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ISSN:1091-4269
1520-6394
1520-6394
DOI:10.1002/da.23085