Effect of concern about COVID-19 on professional self-efficacy, psychological distress, anxiety, and depression in Peruvian health personnel

Oscar Mamani-Benito, Renzo Felipe Carranza Esteban, José Ventura-León, Tomás Caycho-Rodríguez, Rosa Farfán Solís, Darwin Hidalgo Blanco Shocosh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction. Concern about becoming infected with COVID-19 is one of the reactions that has affected the mental health of Peruvian health care workers. Objective. To determine the effect of concern about COVID-19 on professional self-efficacy, psychological distress, anxiety, and depression in health personnel in the Puno region of Peru. Method. An explanatory, cross-sectional study was conducted with the voluntary participation of 401 health workers (such as nurses, physicians, nursing technicians, obstetricians, dentists, psychologists, and nutritionists) of both sexes (24.2% men and 75.5% women) from 12 health networks in the region of Puno, Peru. They were asked to answer the Scale of Concern for the Transmission of COVID-19 in Health Personnel (EPPC-Cov19), Patient Health Questionnarie-2 (PHQ-2, Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale-2 (GAD-2) and Results. The factor loads of the explanatory model showed a good fit: χ² (286) = 797.31, p <.001; IFC =.99; RMSEA =.06; SRMR =.07; WRMR = 1.25. Therefore concern about COVID-19 has a greater effect on anxiety (β =.77) and depression (β =.71), as well as psychological distress (β =.65), and only a mild effect on work self-efficacy (β =.12). Discussion and conclusion. Concern about the spread of COVID-19 affects depression, distress and work self-efficacy among Peruvian health workers in the Puno region of Peru.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)215-220
Number of pages6
JournalSalud Mental
Volume44
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2021
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Effect of concern about COVID-19 on professional self-efficacy, psychological distress, anxiety, and depression in Peruvian health personnel'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this