Unmasking the Impact: Exploring the Role of Masks in Trauma-Informed Care Communication.

Publication date: Aug 01, 2024

The COVID pandemic has necessitated mask-wearing by inpatient providers; however, the impact of masks on the acute care surgeon-patient relationship is unknown. We hypothesized that mask-wearing, while necessary, has a negative impact by acting as a barrier to communication, empathy, and trust between patients and surgeons. A cross-sectional study was performed by administering a written survey in English or Spanish to trauma, emergency general surgery, burn, and surgical critical care inpatients aged ≥18 y at a University Level 1 Trauma Center between January 2023 and June 2023. Patients were asked seven questions about their perception of mask effect on interactions with their surgery providers. Responses were scored on a five-point Likert scale and binarized for multivariable logistic regression. There were 188 patients who completed the survey. The patients were 68% male, 44% Hispanic, and 17% Spanish speaking, with a median age of 45-54 y. A third of patients agreed that surgeon mask-wearing made it harder to understand the details of their surgical procedure and made them less comfortable in giving consent. Twenty three percent agreed that it was harder to trust their provider; increasing age was associated with lower levels of trust, odds ratio 1. 36 (confidence interval 1. 10-1. 71, P = 0. 006). Findings were consistent among patients of different sex, race/ethnicity, language, and pre-COVID hospital experience. Mask-wearing, while important, has a negative impact on the patient-surgeon relationship in trauma and acute care surgery. Providers must be conscious of this effect while wearing masks and strive to optimize communication with patients to ensure high-quality trauma-informed care.

Concepts Keywords
Hispanic Adult
January Aged
June Communication
Race Communication
Surgery COVID
COVID-19
Cross-Sectional Studies
Empathy
Female
Humans
Male
Mask
Masks
Middle Aged
Physician-Patient Relations
Surgery
Surveys and Questionnaires
Trauma
Trauma Centers
Trauma-informed care
Trust
Wounds and Injuries
Young Adult

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH emergency
disease IDO quality
disease MESH COVID-19

Original Article

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