Clin Psychol Psychother
April 2024
Objective: The COVID-19 pandemic had a profound negative impact on the psychological wellbeing of healthcare providers (HPs), but little is known about the factors that positively predict mental health of primary care staff during these dire situations.
Methods: We conducted an online questionnaire survey among 702 emergency department workers across 10 hospitals in Switzerland and Belgium following the first COVID-19 wave in 2020, to explore their psychological vulnerability, perceived concerns, self-reported impact and level of pandemic workplace preparedness. Participants included physicians, nurses, psychologists and nondirect care employees (administrative staff).
Background: Women may receive suboptimal pain management compared with men, and this disparity might be related to gender stereotypes.
Objectives: To assess the influence of patient gender on the management of acute low back pain.
Design: We assessed pain management by 231 physicians using an online clinical vignette describing a consultation for acute low back pain in a female or male patient.
Aims: Our goal was to study hypothermic cardiac arrest (CA) patients who were not rewarmed by Extracorporeal Life Support (ECLS) but were admitted to a hospital equipped for it. The focus was on whether the decisions of non-rewarming, meaning termination of resuscitation, were compliant with international guidelines based on serum potassium at hospital admission.
Methods: We retrospectively included all hypothermic CA who were not rewarmed, from three Swiss centers between 1st January 2000 and 2nd May 2021.
Pre-hospital red blood cell transfusion is already used in many countries, both in military and civilian settings, and provides a better chance of survival for patients suffering from massive bleeding. However, this is not a current practice in Switzerland. This article aims to study Swiss specificities and provide a turnkey concept for the implementation of red blood cell transfusion in an emergency pre-hospital setting, by road or by air.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpiophobia contributes to oligoanalgesia in the emergency department (ED), but its definition varies, and its association to healthcare providers' personality traits has been scantly explored. Our purpose was to study the different definitions of opiophobia and their association with two personality traits of doctors and nurses working in EDs, namely the stress from uncertainty and risk-taking. We used three online questionnaires: the 'Attitude Towards Morphine Use' Score (ATMS), the Stress From Uncertainty Scale (SUS) and the Risk-Taking Scale (RTS).
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