Traumatic stress symptoms among Spanish healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic : A prospective study

Ana Portillo-Van Diest, Gemma Vilagut, Itxaso Alayo, Montse Ferrer, Franco Amigo, Benedikt Amann, A. Aragón-Peña, Enric Aragonès, Á. Asúnsolo Del Barco, M. Campos, I. Del Cura-González, Meritxell Espuga, A. González-Pinto, J.M. Haro, A. Larrauri, N. López-Fresneña, A. Martínez De Salázar, J.D. Molina, R.M. Ortí-Lucas, M. ParelladaJ.M. Pelayo-Terán, A. Pérez-Zapata, J.I. Pijoan, N. Plana, Teresa Puig, Cristina Rius, C. Rodríguez-Blázquez, Ferran Sanz, Consol Serra, I. Urreta-Barallobre, Ronald Kessler, R. Bruffaerts, Eduard Vieta, Victor Perez Sola, Jordi Alonso, Philippe Mortier

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

To investigate the occurrence of traumatic stress symptoms (TSS) among healthcare workers active during the COVID-19 pandemic and to obtain insight as to which pandemic-related stressful experiences are associated with onset and persistence of traumatic stress. This is a multicenter prospective cohort study. Spanish healthcare workers (NÂ =Â 4,809) participated at an initial assessment (i.e., just after the first wave of the Spain COVID-19 pandemic) and at a 4-month follow-up assessment using web-based surveys. Logistic regression investigated associations of 19 pandemic-related stressful experiences across four domains (infection-related, work-related, health-related and financial) with TSS prevalence, incidence and persistence, including simulations of population attributable risk proportions (PARP). Thirty-day TSS prevalence at T1 was 22.1%. Four-month incidence and persistence were 11.6% and 54.2%, respectively. Auxiliary nurses had highest rates of TSS prevalence (35.1%) and incidence (16.1%). All 19 pandemic-related stressful experiences under study were associated with TSS prevalence or incidence, especially experiences from the domains of health-related (PARP range 88.4-95.6%) and work-related stressful experiences (PARP range 76.8-86.5%). Nine stressful experiences were also associated with TSS persistence, of which having patient(s) in care who died from COVID-19 had the strongest association. This association remained significant after adjusting for co-occurring depression and anxiety. TSSs among Spanish healthcare workers active during the COVID-19 pandemic are common and associated with various pandemic-related stressful experiences. Future research should investigate if these stressful experiences represent truly traumatic experiences and carry risk for the development of post-Traumatic stress disorder.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEpidemiologia e Psichiatria Sociale
Volume32
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Aug 2023

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • Health personnel
  • Prospective cohort study
  • Traumatic stress

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