“Did You Bring It Home with You?” A Qualitative Investigation of the Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Victorian Frontline Healthcare Workers and Their Families
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Aims
- What changes, if any, are observed in the functioning of frontline families during the COVID-19 pandemic and associated lockdowns?
- What impact, if any, does frontline work status have on healthcare workers and their families?
- How are frontline families supporting one another during the COVID-19 pandemic?
1.2. Australian COVID-19 Context
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Recruitment
2.2. Procedure
2.3. Data Analysis Procedure
2.4. Reflexivity
3. Results
3.1. Time Together, but at a Cost
3.1.1. Time Together
3.1.2. Impacts on Relationships
3.1.3. Loss of Personal Space
3.1.4. Loss of Social Connection
3.2. A Time of Change
3.2.1. Changes in Family Routines and Roles
We tried to schedule as much as we could… As soon as I got stuff from the school I’d be putting it in my calendar and then I’d be copying that onto a whiteboard so…my kids could see… that helped I think.(F, 39)
The week I was supposed to do a 7 day stretch in the unit, [child] went back to school so then I had to try and swap out of the weekend… you just couldn’t predict what was going to happen in the future … that I think was a little bit of a challenge just trying to think about how to do a juggle with a child who was going to have his routine disrupted again.(F, 44)
3.2.2. Changes in Parents’ Routines
Because I was always working my husband couldn’t get out for that run just to release his tensions…(F, 33)
I probably wouldn’t got back to [Tai Chi] class or if I do, I will probably stand the furtherest away… I’m a front liner, I do not want to expose [older participants].(F, 45)
3.2.3. Changes in Responsibilities
He’s (husband) actually done meals 3 days a week, school pick-up and drop-off every day of the week…The boys have done chores: vacuuming and mopping…And so it’s completely turned on its head… This is the silver lining.(F, 42)
All of a sudden he [husband] was home…obviously it was hard for me to let go of controlling everything at home as well as trying to work and letting him work it out and do it his way; so there was a bit of a teething period.(F, 38)
Being an ICU nurse, being a healthcare worker, everyone asks you oh, what should I be doing?… I remember actually saying to my mum at one point I don’t know, I haven’t worked in a pandemic before … this is all new to me… I’ve never had to do any of this stuff either.(F, 31)
3.3. Increased Demands
[Lockdown] ended up being quite a crazy few months juggling hospital shifts which I absolutely had to go to and trying to support my kids through home learning… I was [a] part time nurse, part time teacher… trying to keep my head above water…(F, 39)
The kids thought… Mum’s home, she can help me with my school work but then it sort of put several hours into the school day then I’d go and do a full shift at the hospital so by the time I’d finish my workday late in the evening I was absolutely exhausted…(F, 39)
3.4. Hypervigilance and Risk of Contagion
3.4.1. Risk Consciousness
His parents were happy to see … his brother’s kids during that time, but weren’t happy to see ours, which I didn’t want them to anyway but there was a bit of double sort of standards going on.(F, 35)
3.4.2. Managing and Mitigating Potential Risks at Home
I prepared them… I told them that they didn’t need to be worried if mummy couldn’t see them for a week because she’d been exposed to it, that everything would be fine, and they should expect that there might be calls or moments like that. (F, 46)
3.5. Getting through It
3.5.1. Wellbeing and Mental Health
I always worry about their wellbeing and their happiness… [but] that was actually probably even more heightened…I really did worry if they were going to make it through this socially and mentally, more than anything. (F, 40)
3.5.2. Coping
In the first lockdown, I felt like I coped with that better. … because it was so—it was such a new kind of concept … we were all in it together and I felt like I was doing okay …. But this second lockdown in particular I know that … I was less patient, I was feeling tense, I was getting—I was feeling quite stressed out …(F, 35)
I put way too much stress on myself, especially…the first time round and the start of the second [lockdown]…once we were in the second part of it, I just had to give up a bit really and do what I could because it was just impossible to do it all.(F, 40)
During the lockdown part, there wasn’t a lot of discipline. We were just all trying to just get through it the best as we could.(F, 38)
4. Discussion
4.1. A Time of Change
4.2. Roles and Routines
4.3. Frontline Work
4.4. Family Resilience and Connection
4.5. Gender
4.6. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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n | % of Parents | |
---|---|---|
Gender | ||
Female | 33 | 85% |
Male | 6 | 15% |
First language | ||
English | 38 | 97% |
Tamil | 1 | 3% |
Age range of participants | ||
Under 30 | 1 | 3% |
30–34 | 6 | 15% |
35–39 | 8 | 21% |
40–44 | 12 | 31% |
45–49 | 8 | 21% |
50–54 | 1 | 3% |
55–59 | 3 | 8% |
Developmental/school stage of children 1 | ||
Pregnant | 4 | 10% |
Birth-Preschool | 15 | 38% |
Primary | 22 | 56% |
Secondary | 13 | 33% |
Post secondary | 2 | 5% |
Relationship status | ||
Married/de facto | 36 | 91% |
Separated/divorced | 3 | 9% |
Cultural Background (self-identified) | ||
Asian | 5 | 12.8% |
Australian—non Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander | 31 | 79.5% |
British or European | 2 | 5.1% |
Other | 1 | 2.6% |
Education | ||
Diploma | 2 | 5.1% |
Graduate degree | 12 | 30.8% |
Postgraduate degree | 25 | 64.1% |
Location | ||
Regional | 6 | 15.4% |
Urban | 33 | 84.6% |
Profession | ||
Allied health | 14 | 36% |
Nursing | 21 | 54% |
Physician/Medical practitioner | 4 | 10% |
Department | ||
COVID-19 Ward | 5 | 13.2% |
Emergency Department | 23 | 60.4% |
Hospital in the Home | 5 | 13.2% |
Intensive Care Unit | 5 | 13.2% |
Leadership position | 10 | 25.6% |
Tested positive to COVID-19 | ||
No | 39 | 100% |
Yes | 0 | 0% |
Theme | Sub-Themes |
---|---|
Time together, but at a cost |
|
Increased demands | |
A time of change |
|
Hypervigilance and risk of contagion |
|
Getting through it |
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Sheen, J.; Clancy, E.M.; Considine, J.; Dwyer, A.; Tchernegovski, P.; Aridas, A.; Lee, B.E.C.; Reupert, A.; Boyd, L. “Did You Bring It Home with You?” A Qualitative Investigation of the Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Victorian Frontline Healthcare Workers and Their Families. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 4897. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19084897
Sheen J, Clancy EM, Considine J, Dwyer A, Tchernegovski P, Aridas A, Lee BEC, Reupert A, Boyd L. “Did You Bring It Home with You?” A Qualitative Investigation of the Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Victorian Frontline Healthcare Workers and Their Families. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(8):4897. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19084897
Chicago/Turabian StyleSheen, Jade, Elizabeth M. Clancy, Julie Considine, Alison Dwyer, Phillip Tchernegovski, Anna Aridas, Brian En Chyi Lee, Andrea Reupert, and Leanne Boyd. 2022. "“Did You Bring It Home with You?” A Qualitative Investigation of the Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Victorian Frontline Healthcare Workers and Their Families" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 8: 4897. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19084897
APA StyleSheen, J., Clancy, E. M., Considine, J., Dwyer, A., Tchernegovski, P., Aridas, A., Lee, B. E. C., Reupert, A., & Boyd, L. (2022). “Did You Bring It Home with You?” A Qualitative Investigation of the Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Victorian Frontline Healthcare Workers and Their Families. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(8), 4897. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19084897