Reflections of Health Care Workers on Their In-Hospital Experiences During the Onset of COVID-19

healthcare workers
emotions
epistemic network analyses
paper
Authors
Affiliations

Danielle Espino

Pepperdine University

Yutong Tan

Orit Zigman Lador

Pepperdine University

Stephanie Alvarez Pham

Pepperdine University

Meg Hokama

University of Arizona

Luiz Oliveira

Seung B. Lee

Pepperdine University

Zachariah Mbasu

Published

January 11, 2022

Abstract

The early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic intensified the role of healthcare workers in hospitals. This study examines how healthcare workers reflected on their in-hospital experiences in the early stages of the pandemic in North America. Audio diary entries from The Nocturnist podcast recorded from March – June 2020 were analyzed using epistemic network analysis (ENA) and heat map models. Overall, there was a shift from responding to immediate needs in March 2020 (such as Anger with Policies and Fear with Resource Availability) to deeper reflections in May-June 2020, more focused on Psychosocial Support and Purpose and more complex emotions involving Sadness and Compassion. Uncertainty was a prominent emotion throughout the May – June 2020 period. These results help document the complexity of reflections early in the pandemic, while informing ways to better support health care workers in future crisis.

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-93859-8_17

Download Paper