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Orthopaedic Surgeons and Covid- 19, the Fear Quotient "What Are We Really Worried About?"

Overview
Specialty Orthopedics
Date 2021 Oct 25
PMID 34690460
Citations 2
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Abstract

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic swiftly affected the world in a very short duration, and the orthopaedic surgery practice is no exception. Unprecedented lockdown was enforced in many countries including India as a first response to contain virus and its spread. That lead to a lot of confusion, fear, anxiety among general population as well as orthopaedic surgeons. We have studied the impact of this pandemic with fear as a denominator and how it affected the practice and health of orthopaedic surgeons.

Methods: Cross-sectional web-based national survey distributed to orthopaedic surgeons by social media platform over period of one month from July 25, 2020 to August 25, 2020.

Results: Among 1065 responders, 731 completed the survey. Among 1065 responders, 27.22% had orthopaedic practice experience ranging from 10 to 20 years while 21.48% had orthopaedic experience more than 20 years. Scientific literature as well as social media and news media contributed significantly to Covid-19 knowledge and fear. 98.88% were worried about contracting disease by themselves or by family members. 89.47% were worried due to financial loss due to pandemic. 37 (5.06%) surgeons had a FCV- 19 scale (Fear for Covid-19 scale) score more than 60 (8.2%) while 291 (39.8%) had 41-60 and score was <40 in 403 (55.12%) surgeons. According to survey vaccine availability and emergence of effective drug and treatment protocol will alleviate most of the concerns. 70.81% felt mildly depressed during pandemic times while 65.33% surgeons expressed interest in joining discussion groups and meetings encouraging positive thoughts.

Conclusion: Financial liabilities and well-being of self and family are important factors which induced fear of Covid-19 among orthopaedic surgeons. Positive discussions and timely information from credible sources regarding prevention, diagnosis and management and will reduce psychological burden due to Covid-19, also this will help to form policies for future pandemics.

Citing Articles

Financial Disruption and Psychological Underpinning During COVID-19: A Review and Research Agenda.

Singh S, Bedi D Front Psychol. 2022; 13:878706.

PMID: 35910967 PMC: 9333085. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.878706.


Stress, anxiety, and burnout of orthopaedic surgeons in COVID-19 pandemic.

Mavrogenis A, Scarlat M Int Orthop. 2022; 46(5):931-935.

PMID: 35384468 PMC: 8984066. DOI: 10.1007/s00264-022-05393-2.

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