Menu
Your Cart

Acute Depression, Extreme Anxiety, and Prolonged Stress among COVID-19 Frontline Healthcare Workers

Acute Depression, Extreme Anxiety, and Prolonged Stress among COVID-19 Frontline Healthcare Workers

ABSTRACT. We develop a conceptual framework based on a systematic and comprehensive literature review on acute depression, extreme anxiety, and prolonged stress among COVID-19 frontline healthcare workers. Building our argument by drawing on data collected from AMS, APA, ARI, BMA, McKinsey, MQ, Nursing Times, and Sermo, we performed analyses and made estimates regarding how the stress and anxiety caused by the COVID-19 pandemic are having an effect on healthcare professionals’ mental health. The data for this research were gathered via an online survey questionnaire and were analyzed through structural equation modeling on a sample of 660 respondents.
JEL codes: H51; H75; I12; I18; D91

Keywords: COVID-19; acute depression; extreme anxiety; prolonged stress

How to cite: Moore, C., and Kolencik, J. (2020). “Acute Depression, Extreme Anxiety, and Prolonged Stress among COVID-19 Frontline Healthcare Workers,” Psychosociological Issues in Human Resource Management 8(1): 55–60. doi:10.22381/PIHRM8120209

Received 25 April 2020 • Received in revised form 20 May 2020
Accepted 20 May 2020 • Available online 20 May 2020

Christine Moore
c.moore@aa-er.org
The Center for Healthcare Big Data Systems
at CLI, Auckland, New Zealand
(corresponding author)
Juraj Kolencik
juraj.kolencik@fpedas.uniza.sk
Department of Economics,
Faculty of Operation and Economics
of Transport and Communications,
University of Zilina, Zilina, Slovak Republic