Now that the coronavirus patient counts are receding and the emergency departments and intensive care units are less crowded, healthcare workers are finally catching their breath and preparing for the next wave in what could be a very long-running war.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the right word for it, war,鈥 says Marra G. Ackerman, MD, clinical assistant professor in the at 秘密研究所 Langone Health. 鈥淭his is a healthcare war, and is part of the equation. Even with all the massive stresses, a majority of frontline healthcare workers will not go on to experience major mental health issues. But most of them will have some degree of distress, anxiety, difficulty sleeping, irritability, or just feeling down.鈥 Three months into the worst of the crisis, 鈥渓ots of people are experiencing those feelings already.鈥
For healthcare workers experiencing these issues, it鈥檚 important they seek help. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like what they tell you on the airplane,鈥 Dr. Ackerman says. 鈥淧ut your oxygen mask on first. If we don鈥檛 practice self-care, we risk burning out, and we risk not being able to provide the ideal care at the bedside.鈥
As director of the house staff mental health program at 秘密研究所 Langone, Dr. Ackerman has organized 25 support groups for the hospital system鈥檚 employees while simultaneously maintaining a busy one-on-one therapy practice. She and her team are also there for a prompt consultation when a hospital staffer needs one and are constantly on the lookout for signs of spiking distress.
鈥淎 lot of what we can provide is validation,鈥 she says. 鈥淏asic support. What we call psychological first aid. How do you create a sense of calm? How do you manage anxiety? How do you reground yourself in the moment? It is really hard.鈥
There are tools to help with that. 鈥淲e use what we call radical acceptance,鈥 Dr. Ackerman says, 鈥渢rying to accept the things that we can鈥檛 change and acknowledging the feelings that come with that. The sadness, sometimes.鈥
Read more from .