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Implementing psychological support for health and social care staff affected by the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative exploration of staff well-being hubs ('Resilience Hubs') using normalisation process theory.

Allsopp, Kate; Varese, Filippo; French, Paul; White, Hannah; Chung, Priscilla; Hassan, Alysha A; Wright, Sally-Anne; Young, Ellie; Barrett, Alan; Bhutani, Gita; McGuirk, Katherine; Huntley, Fay; Sarsam, May; Ten Cate, Hein; Watson, Ruth; Willbourn, Jenni; Hind, Daniel; French, Paul; Chung, Priscilla; Wright, Sally-Anne; Young, Ellie; Barrett, Alan; Bhutani, Gita; McGuirk, Katherine; Huntley, Fay; Sarsam, May; Ten Cate, Hein; Watson, Ruth; Willbourn, Jenni

Implementing psychological support for health and social care staff affected by the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative exploration of staff well-being hubs ('Resilience Hubs') using normalisation process theory. Thumbnail


Authors

Kate Allsopp

Filippo Varese

Paul French

Hannah White

Priscilla Chung

Alysha A Hassan

Sally-Anne Wright

Ellie Young

Alan Barrett

Gita Bhutani

Katherine McGuirk

Fay Huntley

May Sarsam

Hein Ten Cate

Ruth Watson

Jenni Willbourn

Daniel Hind

Paul French

Priscilla Chung

Sally-Anne Wright

Ellie Young

Alan Barrett

Gita Bhutani

Katherine McGuirk

Fay Huntley

May Sarsam

Hein Ten Cate

Ruth Watson

Jenni Willbourn



Abstract

ObjectivesEvaluate the implementation of Hubs providing access to psychological support for health and social care keyworkers affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.DesignQualitative interviews informed by normalisation process theory to understand how the Hub model became embedded into normal practice, and factors that disrupted normalisation of this approach.SettingThree Resilience Hubs in the North of England.ParticipantsHub staff, keyworkers who accessed Hub support (Hub clients), keyworkers who had not accessed a Hub, and wider stakeholders involved in the provision of staff support within the health and care system (N=63).ResultsHubs were generally seen as an effective way of supporting keyworkers, and Hub clients typically described very positive experiences. Flexibility and adaptability to local needs were strongly valued. Keyworkers accessed support when they understood the offer, valuing a confidential service that was separate from their organisation. Confusion about how Hubs differed from other support prevented some from enrolling. Beliefs about job roles, unsupportive managers, negative workplace cultures and systemic issues prevented keyworkers from valuing mental health support. Lack of support from managers discouraged keyworker engagement with Hubs. Black, Asian and minority ethnic keyworkers impacted by racism felt that the Hubs did not always meet their needs.ConclusionsHubs were seen as a valuable, responsive and distinct part of the health and care system. Findings highlight the importance of improving promotion and accessibility of Hubs, and continuation of confidential Hub support. Policy implications for the wider health and care sector include the central importance of genuine promotion of and value placed on mental health support by health and social care management, and the creation of psychologically safe work environments. Diversity and cultural competency training is needed to better reach under-represented communities. Findings are consistent with the international literature, therefore, likely to have applicability outside of the current context.

Citation

Allsopp, K., Varese, F., French, P., White, H., Chung, P., Hassan, A. A., …Willbourn, J. (2023). Implementing psychological support for health and social care staff affected by the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative exploration of staff well-being hubs ('Resilience Hubs') using normalisation process theory. BMJ Open, 13(8), e071826. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-071826

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 11, 2023
Online Publication Date Aug 23, 2023
Publication Date Aug 1, 2023
Deposit Date Sep 19, 2023
Publicly Available Date Sep 19, 2023
Journal BMJ open
Electronic ISSN 2044-6055
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 8
Pages e071826
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-071826
Keywords Implementation, Qualitative, Mental Health Services, Healthcare Staff, Covid-19, Humans, Counseling, Social Support, Pandemics, COVID-19, Asian
PMID 37612138

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