Last updated on 27-1-2022 by Lydia Gisle
Peer reviewed scientific article
Anglais
SCIENSANO
Auteurs
Franco Mascayano; Els van der Ven; Maria Francesca Moro; Sara Schilling; Sebastián Alarcón; Josleen Al Barathie; Lubna Alnasser; Asaoka, Hiroki; Olatunde Ayinde; Arin A. Balalian; Armando Basagoitia; Kirsty Brittain; Bruce Dohrenwend; Sol Durand-Arias; Mehmet Eskin; Eduardo Fernández-Jiménez; Marcela Inés Freytes Frey; Luis Giménez; Lydia Gisle; Hans W. Hoek; Rodrigo Ezequiel Jaldo; Jutta Lindert; Humberto Maldonado; Gonzalo Martínez-Alés; Carmen Martínez-Viciana; Roberto Mediavilla; Clare McCormack; Landon Myer; Javier Narvaez; Nishi, Daisuke; Uta Ouali; Victor Puac-Polanco; Jorge Ramírez; Alexandra Restrepo-Henao; Eliut Rivera-Segarra; Ana M. Rodríguez; Dahlia Saab; Dominika Seblova; Andrea Tenorio Correia da Silva; Linda Valeri; Rubén Alvarado; Ezra SusserMots-clés
Article written during project(s) :
Résumé:
Background Preliminary country-specific reports suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic has a negative impact on the mental health of the healthcare workforce. In this paper, we summarize the protocol of the COVID-19 HEalth caRe wOrkErS (HEROES) study, an ongoing, global initiative, aimed to describe and track longitudinal trajectories of mental health symptoms and disorders among health care workers at different phases of the pandemic across a wide range of countries in Latin America, Europe, Africa, Middle-East, and Asia.
Methods Participants from various settings, including primary care cl…