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Introduction: Healthcare facilities adopted restrictive visitor policies as a result of the COVID-19 (COVID) pandemic. Though these measures were necessary to promote the safety of patients, families and healthcare providers, it led to isolation and loneliness amongst acute care inpatients that can undermine patient rehabilitation and recovery. The study objectives were to (1) explore how infection prevention and control (IP&C) measures impacted stakeholders' perceptions of care quality and interactions with others and (2) investigate how these experiences and perceptions varied across stakeholder groups and care settings.
Methods: A qualitative descriptive study was conducted. Patients and their families from an inpatient COVID rehabilitation hospital and healthcare providers from an acute or rehabilitation COVID hospital were interviewed between August 2020 and February 2021.
Results: A total of 10 patients, 5 family members and 12 healthcare providers were interviewed. Four major themes were identified: (1) IP&C measures challenged the psychosocial health of all stakeholders across care settings; (2): IP&C measures precipitated a need for greater relational care from HCPs; (3) infection prevention tenets perpetuated COVID-related stigma that stakeholders experienced across care settings; and (4) technology was used to facilitate human connection when IP&C limited physical presence.
Conclusion: IP&C measures challenged psychosocial health and maintenance of vital human connections. Loneliness and isolation were felt by all stakeholders due to physical distancing and COVID-related stigma. Some isolation was mitigated by the relational care provided by HCPs and technological innovations used. The findings of the study underscore the need to balance safety with psychosocial well-being across care settings and beyond the patient-provider dyad.
Patient And Public Contribution: This study was informed by the Patient-Oriented Research Agenda and developed through consultations with patients and family caregivers to identify priority areas for rehabilitation research. Priority areas identified that informed the current study were (1) the need to focus on the psychosocial aspects of recovery from illness and injury and (2) the importance of exploring patients' recovery experiences and needs across the continuum of care. The study protocol, ethics submission, analysis and manuscript preparation were all informed by healthcare providers with lived experience of working in COVID care settings.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hex.13558 | DOI Listing |
Zhong Nan Da Xue Xue Bao Yi Xue Ban
May 2025
Nursing Department, Third Xiangya Hospital, Central South University, Changsha 410013.
Objectives: End stage renal disease (ESRD) is a major disease that seriously threatens the health of young people, and kidney transplantation is an effective treatment method to improve its prognosis.Young ESRD patients at a critical stage of life development often face significant physical and psychological challenges while waiting for kidney transplantation. Their psychological state directly affects treatment compliance and transplantation outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article introduces and analyzes a hitherto overlooked phenomenon, that of false fear in medicine. Closely aligned to cases of false hope, false fear is characterized by belief, aversion, and fixation components. Because false fear involves a fixation on an unlikely aversive outcome, it often causes harm to the person and others, and this makes intentionally causing false fear prima facie wrong.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEmerg Med Australas
October 2025
Emergency Department, Austin Health, Melbourne, Australia.
The 'double burden' (or 'second shift') describes the workload of people in paid employment who are also responsible for unpaid domestic work. Globally, most of this work is shouldered by women and is often undervalued. For women working in Emergency Medicine, the double burden is likely to have impacts on career progression and leadership opportunities, as well as present challenges around competing demands of a rotating roster and domestic labour.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Nurs
September 2025
Senior Director Medical and Clinical Affairs, Convatec Technology Centre, Deeside, UK.
Background: The Neria™ Guard infusion set is indicated for the infusion of several medications for Parkinson's and pain-management therapy.
Aim: The aim of this study was to explore the impact of the Neria Guard infusion set on patients and health professionals from the perspective of nurses.
Method: Two surveys were distributed to nurses: one targeting nurses who use Neria Guard for Parkinson's patients, and one for those who use it for palliative care patients.
Toxicol Mech Methods
September 2025
Department of Toxicology and Military Pharmacy, Military Faculty of Medicine, Hradec Kralove, University of Defence, Brno, Czech Republic.
The decontamination of chemical warfare agents or compounds involved in chemical industry incidents poses a significant challenge to environmental protection and human health. These compounds are highly toxic and could be relatively resistant to conventional decontamination methods. In recent years, surfactants have emerged as a promising option, as they can enhance the solubility of organophosphorus compounds in aqueous solutions while promoting their degradation or adsorption onto surfaces.
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