Healthcare (Dec 2020)

Frontline Healthcare Workers’ Knowledge and Perception of COVID-19, and Willingness to Work during the Pandemic in Nepal

  • Dipak Prasad Upadhyaya,
  • Rajan Paudel,
  • Dilaram Acharya,
  • Kaveh Khoshnood,
  • Kwan Lee,
  • Ji-Hyuk Park,
  • Seok-Ju Yoo,
  • Archana Shrestha,
  • Bom BC,
  • Sabin Bhandari,
  • Ramgyan Yadav,
  • Ashish Timalsina,
  • Chetan Nidhi Wagle,
  • Brij Kumar Das,
  • Ramesh Kunwar,
  • Binaya Chalise,
  • Deepak Raj Bhatta,
  • Mukesh Adhikari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040554
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
p. 554

Abstract

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This study investigated the contextual factors associated with the knowledge, perceptions, and the willingness of frontline healthcare workers (FHWs) to work during the COVID-19 pandemic in Nepal among a total of 1051 FHWs. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was applied to identify independent associations between predictors and outcome variables. Of the total study subjects, 17.2% reported inadequate knowledge on COVID-19, 63.6% reported that they perceived the government response as unsatisfactory, and 35.9% showed an unwillingness to work during the pandemic. Our analyses demonstrated that FHWs at local public health facilities, pharmacists, Ayurvedic health workers (HWs), and those with chronic diseases were less likely, and male FHWs were more likely, to have adequate knowledge of COVID-19. Likewise, nurses/midwives, public health workers, FHWs from Karnali and Far-West provinces, and those who had adequate knowledge of COVID-19 were more likely to have satisfactory perceptions towards the government response. Further, FHWs—paramedics, nurse/midwives, public health workers, laboratory workers—FHWs from Karnali Province and Far-West Province, and those with satisfactory perceptions of government responses to COVID-19 were predictors of willingness to work during the COVID-19 pandemic. These results suggest that prompt actions are required to improve FHWs’ knowledge of COVID-19, address negative perceptions of government responses, and motivate them through specific measures to provide healthcare services during the pandemic.

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