A Yale School of Public Health survey of thousands of health workers suggests worrying rates of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder amid a worsening pandemic. And in their new paper, the researchers now have the numbers to prove it.
Their quantitative analysis of the survey data, which was recently published in the journal PLOS ONE, shows that nearly one quarter of all health care workers showed signs of probable PTSD, and almost one half had probable alcohol use disorder. And according to first author Rachel Hennein, an M.D./Ph.D. student at the Yale schools of medicine and public health, the results also show that there are predictive factors associated with increased risk for adverse mental health outcomes among health care workers during the pandemic.
Hennein’s earlier study with the same data painted a dark picture of life in the middle of the pandemic. Workers detailed their dismay about an ineffective federal government and frustration at medical skepticism, all while remaining separated from family and friends for weeks at a time. But while that analysis captured a descriptive side of the early COVID-19 response, this new one helps to frame those voices in a statistically significant way, she said.
The result is a mosaic of data points that, taken together, can help guide efforts to improve health care workers’ morale and mental health — especially as the pandemic creeps into its second year.
“Making sure supervisors are there for support, making sure problems get resolved in a fair manner and everyone’s included in decision-making,” she said, “could actually help health care workers with PTSD symptoms in the hospital.”
Some socioeconomic factors could predict mental health disorders in the survey population, too. For example, female gender was associated with probable PTSD. Health care workers whose teams had lower cohesion were more likely to have the disorder as well. And probable general anxiety disorder was more common in those who reported having a decreased satisfaction with the federal government.