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Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021

IMPORTANCE: The second year of the COVID-19 pandemic saw periods of dire health care resource limitations in the US, sometimes prompting official declarations of crisis, but little is known about how these conditions were experienced by frontline clinicians. OBJECTIVE: To describe the experiences of...

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Autores principales: Butler, Catherine R., Wightman, Aaron G., Taylor, Janelle S., Hick, John L., O’Hare, Ann M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10276299/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37326986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.18810
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author Butler, Catherine R.
Wightman, Aaron G.
Taylor, Janelle S.
Hick, John L.
O’Hare, Ann M.
author_facet Butler, Catherine R.
Wightman, Aaron G.
Taylor, Janelle S.
Hick, John L.
O’Hare, Ann M.
author_sort Butler, Catherine R.
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: The second year of the COVID-19 pandemic saw periods of dire health care resource limitations in the US, sometimes prompting official declarations of crisis, but little is known about how these conditions were experienced by frontline clinicians. OBJECTIVE: To describe the experiences of US clinicians practicing under conditions of extreme resource limitation during the second year of the pandemic. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This qualitative inductive thematic analysis was based on interviews with physicians and nurses providing direct patient care at US health care institutions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Interviews were conducted between December 28, 2020, and December 9, 2021. EXPOSURE: Crisis conditions as reflected by official state declarations and/or media reports. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Clinicians’ experiences as obtained through interviews. RESULTS: Interviews with 23 clinicians (21 physicians and 2 nurses) who were practicing in California, Idaho, Minnesota, or Texas were included. Of the 23 total participants, 21 responded to a background survey to assess participant demographics; among these individuals, the mean (SD) age was 49 (7.3) years, 12 (57.1%) were men, and 18 (85.7%) self-identified as White. Three themes emerged in qualitative analysis. The first theme describes isolation. Clinicians had a limited view on what was happening outside their immediate practice setting and perceived a disconnect between official messaging about crisis conditions and their own experience. In the absence of overarching system-level support, responsibility for making challenging decisions about how to adapt practices and allocate resources often fell to frontline clinicians. The second theme describes in-the-moment decision-making. Formal crisis declarations did little to guide how resources were allocated in clinical practice. Clinicians adapted practice by drawing on their clinical judgment but described feeling ill equipped to handle some of the operationally and ethically complex situations that fell to them. The third theme describes waning motivation. As the pandemic persisted, the strong sense of mission, duty, and purpose that had fueled extraordinary efforts earlier in the pandemic was eroded by unsatisfying clinical roles, misalignment between clinicians’ own values and institutional goals, more distant relationships with patients, and moral distress. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The findings of this qualitative study suggest that institutional plans to protect frontline clinicians from the responsibility for allocating scarce resources may be unworkable, especially in a state of chronic crisis. Efforts are needed to directly integrate frontline clinicians into institutional emergency responses and support them in ways that reflect the complex and dynamic realities of health care resource limitation.
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spelling pubmed-102762992023-06-18 Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021 Butler, Catherine R. Wightman, Aaron G. Taylor, Janelle S. Hick, John L. O’Hare, Ann M. JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: The second year of the COVID-19 pandemic saw periods of dire health care resource limitations in the US, sometimes prompting official declarations of crisis, but little is known about how these conditions were experienced by frontline clinicians. OBJECTIVE: To describe the experiences of US clinicians practicing under conditions of extreme resource limitation during the second year of the pandemic. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This qualitative inductive thematic analysis was based on interviews with physicians and nurses providing direct patient care at US health care institutions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Interviews were conducted between December 28, 2020, and December 9, 2021. EXPOSURE: Crisis conditions as reflected by official state declarations and/or media reports. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Clinicians’ experiences as obtained through interviews. RESULTS: Interviews with 23 clinicians (21 physicians and 2 nurses) who were practicing in California, Idaho, Minnesota, or Texas were included. Of the 23 total participants, 21 responded to a background survey to assess participant demographics; among these individuals, the mean (SD) age was 49 (7.3) years, 12 (57.1%) were men, and 18 (85.7%) self-identified as White. Three themes emerged in qualitative analysis. The first theme describes isolation. Clinicians had a limited view on what was happening outside their immediate practice setting and perceived a disconnect between official messaging about crisis conditions and their own experience. In the absence of overarching system-level support, responsibility for making challenging decisions about how to adapt practices and allocate resources often fell to frontline clinicians. The second theme describes in-the-moment decision-making. Formal crisis declarations did little to guide how resources were allocated in clinical practice. Clinicians adapted practice by drawing on their clinical judgment but described feeling ill equipped to handle some of the operationally and ethically complex situations that fell to them. The third theme describes waning motivation. As the pandemic persisted, the strong sense of mission, duty, and purpose that had fueled extraordinary efforts earlier in the pandemic was eroded by unsatisfying clinical roles, misalignment between clinicians’ own values and institutional goals, more distant relationships with patients, and moral distress. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The findings of this qualitative study suggest that institutional plans to protect frontline clinicians from the responsibility for allocating scarce resources may be unworkable, especially in a state of chronic crisis. Efforts are needed to directly integrate frontline clinicians into institutional emergency responses and support them in ways that reflect the complex and dynamic realities of health care resource limitation. American Medical Association 2023-06-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10276299/ /pubmed/37326986 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.18810 Text en Copyright 2023 Butler CR et al. JAMA Network Open. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Butler, Catherine R.
Wightman, Aaron G.
Taylor, Janelle S.
Hick, John L.
O’Hare, Ann M.
Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021
title Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021
title_full Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021
title_fullStr Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021
title_full_unstemmed Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021
title_short Experiences of US Clinicians Contending With Health Care Resource Scarcity During the COVID-19 Pandemic, December 2020 to December 2021
title_sort experiences of us clinicians contending with health care resource scarcity during the covid-19 pandemic, december 2020 to december 2021
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10276299/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37326986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.18810
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