Research Papers:
Prevalence of psychological symptoms among Ebola survivors and healthcare workers during the 2014-2015 Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone: a cross-sectional study
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Abstract
Dong Ji1,2,*, Ying-Jie Ji1,2,*, Xue-Zhang Duan1,2, Wen-Gang Li1,2, Zhi-Qiang Sun1,2, Xue-Ai Song1,2, Yu-Hua Meng1,2, Hong-Mei Tang1,2, Fang Chu1,2, Xiao-Xia Niu1, Guo-Feng Chen1, Jin Li1,2, Hui-Juan Duan1,2
1302 Military Hospital of China, Beijing, China
2Sierra Leone-China Friendship Hospital, Freetown, Sierra Leone
*These authors contributed equally to this work
Correspondence to:
Hui-Juan Duan, email: [email protected]
Jin Li, email: [email protected]
Keywords: ebola virus disease, psychological symptoms, SCL-90-R, emerging infectious disease, emergency response plan
Received: July 20, 2016 Accepted: December 12, 2016 Published: January 04, 2017
ABSTRACT
The 2014–2015 Ebola epidemic was considered to be the largest and most complex outbreak, which caused 11,310 reported deaths. The epidemic disease can cause a mental health crisis, however, there is only a small amount of scientific literature available related to this health issue so far. We evaluated the psychological symptoms of 161 participants including Ebola survivors and healthcare workers in Sierra Leone, analyzed the impact of job classification, education level on psychological status. We found that the order of total general severity index (GSI) scores from high to low was EVD survivors, SL medical staff, SL logistic staff, SL medical students, and Chinese medical staff. There were 5 dimensions (obsession-compulsion, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, and paranoid ideation) extremely high in EVD survivors. GSI were associated with university education negatively. We believed our information is necessary to develop the comprehensive emergency response plan for emerging infectious disease outbreak.
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