Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

PPE Portraits—a Way to Humanize Personal Protective Equipment

2020; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 35; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/s11606-020-05875-2

ISSN

1525-1497

Autores

Cati Brown‐Johnson, Stacie Vilendrer, Mary Beth Heffernan, Shira G. Winter, Thanh Khong, Jennifer Reidy, Steven M. Asch,

Tópico(s)

Empathy and Medical Education

Resumo

The use of personal protective equipment (PPE) has skyrocketed, as providers don masks, glasses, and gowns to protect their eyes, noses, and mouths from COVID-19. Yet these same facial features express human individuality, and are crucial to nonverbal communication. Isolated ICU patients may develop “post intensive-care syndrome,” which mimics PTSD with sometimes debilitating consequences. While far from a complete solution, PPE Portraits (disposable portrait picture stickers - 4" × 5") have the potential to humanize care. Preparing for a larger effectiveness evaluation on patient and provider experience, we collected initial qualitative implementation insights during Spring 2020’s chaotic surge preparation. Front-line providers reported more comfort with patient interactions while wearing PPE Portraits: “It makes it feel less like a disaster zone [for the patient].” A brief pilot showed signs of significant adoption: a participating physician requested PPE Portraits at their clinic, shift nurses had taken PPE Portraits with them to inpatient services, and masked medical assistant team-members requested PPE Portraits to wear over scrubs. We believe PPE Portraits may support patient care and health, and even potentially healthcare team function and provider wellness. While we await data on these effects, we hope hospitals can use our findings to speed their own implementation testing.

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