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Factors associated with stigma and manifestations experienced by Indian health care workers involved in COVID-19 management in India: A qualitative study

Authors :
Ashoo Grover
U Venkatesh
Jugal Kishore
Tapas Chakma
Beena Thomas
Geetha Menon
Murugesan Periyasamy
Ragini Kulkarni
Ranjan K Prusty
Chitra Venkateswaran
Bijaya Mishra
Vinoth Balu
Maribon Viray
Geetu Mathew
Asha Ketharam
Rakesh Balachandar
Prashant Singh
Kiran Jakhar
Rekha Devi
Kalyan Saha
Pradeep Barde
Rony Moral
Ravinder Singh
Denny John
Jeetendra Yadav
Simran Kohli
Sumit Aggarwal
Vishnu Rao
Samiran Panda
Source :
Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health, Vol 10 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2023.

Abstract

Healthcare personnel who deal with COVID-19 experience stigma. There is a lack of national-level representative qualitative data to study COVID-19-related stigma among healthcare workers in India. The present study explores factors associated with stigma and manifestations experienced by Indian healthcare workers involved in COVID-19 management. We conducted in-depth interviews across 10 centres in India, which were analysed using NVivo software version 12. Thematic and sentiment analysis was performed to gain deep insights into the complex phenomenon by categorising the qualitative data into meaningful and related categories. Healthcare workers (HCW) usually addressed the stigma they encountered when doing their COVID duties under the superordinate theme of stigma. Among them, 77.42% said they had been stigmatised in some way. Analyses revealed seven interrelated themes surrounding stigma among healthcare workers. It can be seen that the majority of the stigma and coping sentiments fall into the mixed category, followed by the negative sentiment category. This study contributes to our understanding of stigma and discrimination in low- and middle-income settings. Our data show that the emergence of fear of the virus has quickly turned into a stigma against healthcare workers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20544251
Volume :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8f1ae91521f4f89b86887c57c399d49
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/gmh.2023.40