Behind the screen: exploring the effects of home working on 999 telephone clinicians during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Edward Harry, Mike Brady
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Abstract

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly stretched global healthcare provisions since its commencement in 2019. From the outset, ambulance services in the UK had to adapt and change their working practices to meet distancing requirements, to increase staff numbers and to ease the effects of staff becoming unavailable for work due to self-isolation and illness. One strategy was moving clinicians from emergency operation centres (EOCs) to working from home. Like many international services, UK ambulance services use paramedics and nurses to undertake telephone and video assessments of patients calling the 999 emergency services line in a model known as virtual care or remote clinical decision making. Virtual care is any interaction between a patient and a clinician or clinicians, occurring remotely via information technologies.Increasing evidence is becoming available to suggest that the pandemic caused harm to the well-being of healthcare workers, primarily due to the severe stress of regular exposure to death and human suffering. However, there remains a dearth of literature focusing on the well-being of remote and virtual clinicians, especially those who moved from working in EOCs to working at home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, this study reports the findings of a qualitative analysis of these effects from the clinician's perspective. The authors hope that the findings from this study will inform the operating, well-being and leadership practices of those delivering such services.

Methods: A convenience sample of telephone nurses and paramedics from one UK ambulance service where home working had been implemented were contacted. Fifteen clinicians with recent home-working experience responded to the invitation to participate out of a possible 31 (48%). All participants had previously practised remote assessment from within an EOC. Semi-structured interviews took place via video-conferencing software and were recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed. An inductive approach was taken to generating codes, and both researchers separately read the transcripts before re-reading them, assigning initial themes and determining frequency.

Results: Five main themes were discovered, with further associated sub-themes. The main themes were: safety; financial implications; working relationships; home-working environment; and anxiety.

Conclusions: Few studies explore remote clinicians' health and well-being. This study identified that home-working clinicians felt that there had been no detrimental impact on their health and well-being because of working from home during the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. While some concerns were raised, these were mitigated through the support that clinicians received at home from family members, as well as from colleagues, some of whom had developed new working relationships. Financial implications appeared to have contributed to some concerns for participants initially, but these had been alleviated quickly despite requiring further exploration of the true financial impact of working from home.

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屏幕背后:探讨 COVID-19 大流行期间在家工作对 999 电话临床医生的影响。
导言:COVID-19 大流行自 2019 年开始以来已大大增加了全球医疗保健供应。从一开始,英国的救护车服务部门就不得不调整和改变工作方式,以满足拉开距离的要求,增加工作人员数量,并缓解工作人员因自我隔离和疾病而无法工作所带来的影响。其中一项策略就是将临床医生从紧急行动中心(EOC)转移到家中工作。与许多国际服务机构一样,英国救护车服务机构也使用辅助医务人员和护士对拨打 999 急救服务热线的病人进行电话和视频评估,这种模式被称为虚拟护理或远程临床决策。越来越多的证据表明,大流行病对医护人员的健康造成了损害,这主要是由于经常接触死亡和人类痛苦所带来的巨大压力。然而,关注远程和虚拟临床医生福祉的文献仍然很少,尤其是那些在 COVID-19 大流行期间从紧急医疗中心转到家中工作的临床医生。因此,本研究报告了从临床医生的角度对这些影响进行定性分析的结果。作者希望本研究的结果能够为提供此类服务的人员的工作、福利和领导实践提供参考:方法:作者联系了英国一家已实施家庭办公的救护车服务机构的电话护士和辅助医务人员。在可能参与的 31 位临床医生中,有 15 位(48%)最近有过在家工作的经历。所有参与者都曾在平机会内进行过远程评估。半结构式访谈是通过视频会议软件进行的,并进行了录音、转录和主题分析。两位研究人员分别阅读了访谈记录,然后重新阅读,确定了最初的主题并确定了频率:结果:发现了五大主题,以及更多相关的次主题。这些主题分别是:安全、财务影响、工作关系、家庭工作环境和焦虑:很少有研究探讨远程临床医生的健康和福祉。本研究发现,在 COVID-19 大流行的初期阶段,在家工作的临床医生认为在家工作对他们的健康和福利没有造成不利影响。虽然有人提出了一些担忧,但由于临床医生在家中得到了家人和同事的支持,这些担忧得到了缓解,其中一些人还建立了新的工作关系。最初,财务影响似乎导致了参与者的一些担忧,但尽管需要进一步探讨在家工作的真正财务影响,这些担忧很快就得到了缓解。
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