“I Carry the Trauma and Can Vividly Remember”: Mental Health Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Frontline Health Care Workers in South Africa
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Experiences of Working in the COVID-19 Ward
3.1.1. Working under Pressure with No Time to Grieve the Loss of Colleagues
“We only worked inside the COVID-19 ward for 6 h compared to a normal shift [12 h], but that 6 h would be under extreme pressure, we would not even have time to eat.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“In [Hospital 1] we were working tough in our shift but at least at 10 h00 we would eat and you can go to the toilet in between. But here in COVID-19 ward we are working six hours. Like in the PPEs it is hot and maybe you are in a mask and you can’t get outside, your bladder is full and maybe you are hungry, so it’s so hectic…Six hours feels like 12 h, and even 12 h is better… you can spend the whole six hours standing…admitting patients, resuscitating, incubating, and transferring, it is so hectic.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“I think they would make the announcements in our meeting telling us so and so (naming the person) has passed on or you will see reports on the social group like a WhatsApp group of the ward. The department will also support or go to that family or you just give (monetary) contribution where you can and that’s where it ends. We had to keep moving, carry on and be resilient. You can’t be sad while more people are dying and needing your attention. You just have to move on.” (Doctor, Gauteng, hospital)
3.1.2. Complexity of Treating COVID-19 Patients and Feeling Less in Control
“It is hectic, COVID patients just change suddenly because you will nurse a patient then suddenly the patient just gets desaturated [drop in blood oxygen level] and starting to be distressed. We start to resuscitate, and incubate and 5 min later the patient dies…Then you have to call the family and explain to them what happened.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“A patient would arrive able to walk by themselves, then the condition will get worse and they die… Also sometimes seeing the patient arriving not in bad condition, but the condition became worse while admitted and they die.” (Professional nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
“We don’t have enough ICU staff, and sometimes you see that patients die not because of the virus but because of the lack of care…when you are short staffed you can’t give care to everyone and then you would feel like you are not doing enough for the patients even though you want to but you can’t. That stays with you for the rest of your life.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“You find that one professional nurse had to look after some fifty confirmed cases of positive patients with COVID, maybe we would have two nurses or one staff nurse, I was working alone particularly in night shifts, one staff nurse one enrolled nurse and two ENAs with four or five patients, looking after fifty patients so it was straining us and you could only do so much.” (Professional nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
3.2. Anxiety and Fear of Getting Infected and Death
“At the beginning of the COVID we [HCWs] were so scared… First of all, when they said there is COVID you remember around April, or I think March, and we had the first patient, we were very scared that we are going to die, and we were the first group to come. They [managers] had to send us here [ COVID-19 ward] so people didn’t want to get inside [the COVID-19 ward]. Even the doctors were standing there and we needed them to give us prescription but they didn’t want to go there, they didn’t want to die because most of the nurses don’t want to die, the professional nurses were dying and I think the statistics was around 100 and something [deaths]. So, we were very scared, and every time we go there [COVID-19 ward] we would tell ourselves that we are not coming back [alive]… we were so scared knowing that we will leave our families and parents behind.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“Everybody was terrified. Everybody in the ward is crying and you don’t feel like you can continue, you realize that you can’t expect normal emotions in an abnormal situation and everybody feels the same.” (Doctor, Gauteng, hospital).
“I can say during the first waves it was very difficult because it was the first time for us to hear about COVID-19 and we were scared I don’t want to lie, and there were no PPEs at work by that time. So, we were supposed to go and nurse the patient without protection and as I am staying with my daughter at home, I was worried that I wonder what will happen to her. But we had to nurse the patients with COVID-19 anyway because there was nothing we can do.” (Professional nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
“I ended up calling my attorney to help me with that because I felt that, why me? I have a small child, so that means I am going to die, and do you remember last year [2020] what was happening, so it was emotionally draining, and I even thought of resigning, but I have kids so I can’t stay at home, I ended up going to join [name of life insurance] a life cover, I joined it because of the pandemic so that if I die at least my kids must be left with something.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“So initially it was a bit difficult to adjust because we feared the unknown [COVID-19], we were not sure what we are dealing with you know, there was still uncertainty about how we should work, what to do and how we should divide ourselves in the COVID ward and certain people should be exposed than others, but now it’s a general thing like every day I know that I am going to work in a structure and everybody knows what is expected out there than before, that structure was still established.” (Medical registrar, internal medicine, Gauteng, hospital)
“Being a health care worker and having to work with the COVID positive patients, I was afraid. Initially I didn’t know and how to work with the patients of COVID, I tried all the means of going to my doctor to write me a letter to tell my manager that I can’t work in the COVID ward because I was afraid that being a health care worker with co-morbidities, I’m going to be part of the statistics. I am going to die from this.” (Operations Manager, Gauteng, hospital)
“We felt like they dumped us here and nobody came here, and nobody cared about us even the government did not care about us, so that is why I am saying it was affecting emotionally and every time when we had to come here [hospital] we were not feeling okay… I was feeling sad, actually I was so scared I never thought I will survive especially because I have underlying disease, I thought this corona is going to take me.” (Doctor, Gauteng, hospital)
3.3. Mental Health Impacts of COVID-19
3.3.1. “I Carry the Trauma”: Distress of Seeing Patients “Dying like Flies” Everyday
“I remember one time it was Monday, you know when you come from home you are feeling fresh and you start a week, when I get to this other door, I came across four corpses and then I turned around and went that side I got four and I was like there is no other door that I will use, so I had to get in. When I got in, there were more, then I was not okay... I don’t want to lie; I went to the toilet I cried.” (Care services staff, Gauteng, hospital)
“It was so stressful and emotional because you will see people dying… Yes, you see people dying like maybe four people a day and it was emotional, and it is not something that you are used to like sometimes even in the unit that I was working in, maybe in three months there is only one death… Everyday people are dying! Some are still young and some are old.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“Mentally and emotionally, you get affected because it’s very painful when you talk with the person and it seems she is happy or he is happy like saying ‘sister within two days I’m going home’, the next thing they don’t go home. They go home as a corpse. You feel for their kids and their family members, put yourself in their shoes, imagine how they feel—because they usually call every day to check on their relatives.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“It was very sad because it wasn’t just only patients. There were some people we knew ‘colleagues’ as our patients that got affected by COVID-19 and some of them died… there was a lot of stress and sadness around the hospital… it was very sad, very sad and it was depressing that we couldn’t even go there to pay our last respect.” (Doctor, Easter Cape, hospital)
P: Yes, and the other day we nursed our colleague who was here and it was not easy and she died, it was during the first waveF: Oh, so how did you feel? What went through your mind?P: I was scared I do not want to lie, when I got home sometimes, I couldn’t sleep because I was thinking what will happen to me because I am also working in the high care, and because I saw her two weeks before she was fine but in a space of two weeks, she is gone just like that (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
3.3.2. Symptoms of Poor Mental Health among FHCWs: “Not an Easy Journey”
“Having to break the news and explain what happened has been emotionally draining. When there is nothing else you can do as a doctor for the patient, you have to let their family know. I carry the trauma and can vividly remember cases and families of all patients I have lost, the sadness on their families’ faces, the heart-break.” (Doctor, Gauteng, hospital)
“We were like losing our minds after going through the first wave. I could not sleep, always exhausted and experienced burn out.” (Professional nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
“This thing of COVID-19, it has traumatized us…I am having those flashbacks of the COVID-19 ward when the numbers were above 50 in the ward. You have to run all over knowing very well that you are also exposing yourself, but you don’t have another option because these people need you more, so it was not easy.” (Operations Manager, Eastern Cape, hospital)
3.4. Impact on Physical Health
“I was feeling tired and when you are tired you are going to get weak, we were feeling weak and on top of that when we experienced burn out… when you are stressed even amongst co-workers we were fighting over small things like you would ask someone “why are you taking this person”, “why are you doing this”, so those fights shows that you are burnout because you are tired, so we were fighting and even the doctors were fighting, if the doctor gives you orders we would argue with them.” (Specialist in critical care, Gauteng, hospital)
“I started experiencing constant chest pains, I don’t know if it was this mask or what I was going through emotionally. I would have chest pains that is heavy here [point to middle of her chest].” (Professional nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
“I’m a very optimistic person and I love my job. Before COVID-19 I would not want to do anything else. I get up in the morning and I’m really excited to go to work. All of this changed, and I would not want to come to work. I started to get exhausted, headache, and I started to get irritated, we had to attend to too many cases, it was hectic. The workload nearly tripled, there was both a physical strain and an emotional strain.” (Doctor, Gauteng, hospital)
3.5. Intrinsic Motivation and Peer Support
“It’s about just reminding yourself that one day you took an oath and by the time you were taking an oath you did not choose that I will run away when the situation is like this. It was just about telling yourself, also it was about putting yourself in the shoes of someone who need you at this moment, you see.” (Operations manager, Eastern Cape, hospital)
“I just drew my strength from God, every day I would ask God to help me, I would tell God that I can’t do this alone and he has put me out here for a reason, so that’s how I deal with it, I don’t know about others.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“We have supported each other to deal with the anxieties, we encouraged each other to say ‘okay guys we are here and we said we are coming to deal with this [COVID-19], so let’s fight it’.” (Professional nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
3.6. Institutional Support Provided to FHCWs
“Sometimes the supervision staff they are coming this side bringing sweets just to cheer us up and to hear about us and the challenges we experience. Talking to them helps.” (Professional nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“Managers talk to us about everything related to COVID-19, so we don’t have stress [laughing].” (Assistant nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
“We do have a support especially the pastors outside they came in here and pray for us. We had a psychologist whom we talked to about COVID-19 and everything… If I need counselling, I just have to call then they come.” (Assistant nurse, Gauteng, hospital)
“There were psychosocial services that we were given, there was a social worker, we are also having a phone number whereby everybody was allowed to take a phone and call the lady and talk to her.” (Operations manager, Eastern Cape, hospital)
“Emotional support I think that’s still lacking and I think that’s something they need to improve on. I found out that once somebody gets COVID and now needs to recover for 10 days there is no support offered to that person. There was not much support, rather, you just go to isolate at home, and when you come back you are expected to catch up all the shifts that you didn’t do when you had COVID.” (Doctor, Gauteng, hospital)
“After having committed yourself and risked death during COVID-19, government should have provided monetary incentives for HCWs who were on the frontline. That to us would have demonstrated support.” (Professional nurse, Eastern Cape, hospital)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Overall N = 44 | Profession | Gender | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Doctors N = 8 (18%) | Nurses N = 30 (68%) | * Care Services N = 3 (7%) | COVID Ward Managers N = 3 (7%) | Male N = 9 (20%) | Female N = 35 (80%) | ||
Province | |||||||
Gauteng | 25 (57%) | 6 (75%) | 16 (53%) | 2 (67%) | 1 (33%) | 5 (56%) | 20 (57%) |
Eastern Cape | 19 (43%) | 2 (25%) | 14 (47%) | 1 (33%) | 2 (67%) | 4 (44%) | 15 (43%) |
Facility | |||||||
Hospital | 33 (75%) | 6 (86%) | 22 (73%) | 2 (67%) | 3 (100%) | 9 (100%) | 24 (69%) |
Clinic | 11 (25%) | 1 (14%) | 8 (27%) | 1 (33%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 11 (31%) |
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Mahlangu, P.; Sikweyiya, Y.; Gibbs, A.; Shai, N.; Machisa, M. “I Carry the Trauma and Can Vividly Remember”: Mental Health Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Frontline Health Care Workers in South Africa. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 2365. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032365
Mahlangu P, Sikweyiya Y, Gibbs A, Shai N, Machisa M. “I Carry the Trauma and Can Vividly Remember”: Mental Health Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Frontline Health Care Workers in South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(3):2365. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032365
Chicago/Turabian StyleMahlangu, Pinky, Yandisa Sikweyiya, Andrew Gibbs, Nwabisa Shai, and Mercilene Machisa. 2023. "“I Carry the Trauma and Can Vividly Remember”: Mental Health Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Frontline Health Care Workers in South Africa" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 3: 2365. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032365
APA StyleMahlangu, P., Sikweyiya, Y., Gibbs, A., Shai, N., & Machisa, M. (2023). “I Carry the Trauma and Can Vividly Remember”: Mental Health Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Frontline Health Care Workers in South Africa. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(3), 2365. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032365