Frontline nurses’ burnout, anxiety, depression, fear status and their associated factors during COVID-19 outbreak in Wuhan, China: A big-scale cross-sectional study

Main Author: zhu, Jiemin
Format: Dataset
Terbitan: Mendeley , 2020
Subjects:
Online Access: https:/data.mendeley.com/datasets/rznwtdmxz4
Daftar Isi:
  • Our research questions were: (a) What are the levels of burnout, anxiety, depression, fear, skin lesion, self-efficacy, resilience, social support among frontline nurses caring for COVID-19 patients? (b) What are the prevalence of burnout, anxiety, depression, and fear among the frontline nurses? (c) What are the differences in burnout, anxiety, depression and fear between nurses’ various sociodemographic and other COVID-related background subgroups? (d) What are the relationships between burnout, anxiety, depression, fear and other aforementioned variables? We found that On average, participants had moderate level of burnout and high level of fear. About half of nurses reported modereate/high work burnout as shown in emotional exhaustion (1,218, 60.5%), depersonalization (853, 42.3%) and personal accomplishment (1,219, 60.6%). Findings showed that 288 (14.3%), 217 (10.7%) and 1,837 (91.2%) reported moderate/high levels of anxiety, depression and fear, respectively. The majority of nurses (n=1,910, 94.8%) had one or more skin lesions, and 1,950 (96.8%) nurses expressed their willingness in participating frontline work. The mental health outcomes were statistically positively correlated with skin lesion, and negatively correlated with self-efficacy, resilience, social support, and their frontline work willingness.