Healthcare Professionals' Willingness and Preparedness to Work During COVID-19 in Selected Hospitals of Southwest Ethiopia

2021 
BACKGROUND: Many healthcare professionals are dying of COVID-19 while trying to save others The loss in the healthcare workforce due to sickness and absence will double the risk of a crisis Identifying barriers of willingness to work during epidemics outbreak and preparedness of healthcare professionals is important to minimize the shortage of human power METHODS: Facility-based cross-sectional study was conducted among healthcare professionals working in the selected hospitals of Southwest Ethiopia from June 1-30/2020 The data entry was done by Epi-Data Manager version 4 4 1 0 and exported to SPSS version 23 for analysis Multivariable logistic regression analysis with a backward stepwise approach was done to identify independent predictors of poor preparedness and willingness of the healthcare professionals to work during COVID-19 and Variables with P-value <0 05 were considered as a statistically significant determinant RESULTS: Of 407 healthcare professionals who participated in the study, 246 (60 4%) were male The mean age of the respondents was 28 47±5 60 years Forty-seven (11 55%) Physicians, 59 (14 50%) pharmacy personnel, 52 (12 78%) Laboratory personnel, 31 (7 62%) Midwives, and 195 (47 91%) Nurses were included in the study The healthcare professionals who were not prepared for the provision of services during COVID-19 and not willing to work during COVID-19 were 165 (40 5%) and 86 (21 1%) respectively Having 6 to10 years' experience (AOR=4 046, CI: 1 05-15 58), and divorced marital status (AOR=7 855, CI: 1 781-34 65) were independent predictors of not willing to work during COVID-19 Similarly, lack of personal protective equipment (AOR=28 089, CI: 13 9-56 67) and shortage of infrastructure at the work place (AOR=28 1, CI: 13 9-56 67) were independent predictors of poor preparedness CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS: Healthcare professionals' willingness and preparedness to work during COVID-19 was low Use of Telemedicine, provision of personal protective equipment, increasing hospital's safety with adequate infection control policy, and assigning staff who have experience of more than ten years in the risky wards of the hospitals may decrease staffs absentee and increase in the provision of continuous service
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