Cope Columbia

Cope Columbia

Objective
COVID-19 is an international public health crisis, putting substantial burden on Medicalcenters and increasing the psychological toll on health care workers (HCW).
Methods
This paper describes CopeColumbia, a peer support program developed by faculty in a large urban Medicalcenter's Department of Psychiatry to support emotional well-being and enhance the professional resilience of HCW.
Results
Grounded in evidence-based clinical practice and research, peer support was offered in three formats: groups, individual sessions, and town halls. Also, psychoeducational resources were centralized on a website. A Facilitator's Guide informed group and individual work by including: (1) emotional themes likely to arise (e.g., stress, anxiety, trauma, grief, and anger) and (2) suggested facilitator responses and interventions, drawing upon evidence-based principles from peer support, stress and coping models, and problem-solving, cognitive behavioral, and acceptance and commitment therapies. Feedback from group sessions was overwhelmingly positive. Approximately 1/3 of individual sessions led to treatment referrals.
Conclusions
Lessons learned include: (1) there is likely an ongoing need for both well-being programs and linkages to mental health services for HCW, (2) the workforce with proper support, will emerge emotionally resilient, and (3) organizational support for programs like CopeColumbia is critical for sustainability.

Rank: 61
First Author: Mellins
Outcome: Intervention Experience,Distress
Outcome p-value: Intervention Experience:●, Distress:⭑
Intervention Category: Peer Support,Organizational and System-Level
Time per Employee (hours): No time specified.
D&B Study Quality Rating: 15
Reviewer Confidence: 3
Country: US
Study Design Type: Quasi-experimental
Materials Available to Implement: Peer support program outlined in the publication; program resources are available at: https://www.cuimc.columbia.edu/copecolumbia. Contact CopeColumbia@cumc.columbia.edu, to learn more and to obtain the Facilitator’s Guide. Co-lead authors' email addresses: cam14@cumc.columbia.edu, lsm16@cumc.columbia.edu
Organiz./Individ. Focus: Individual / Organizational
Prevention Category: Primary,Secondary
Effect size Small:
Effect size Medium:
Reference: Mellins, C. A., Mayer, L. E., Glasofer, D. R., Devlin, M. J., Albano, A. M., Nash, S. S., ... & Baptista-Neto, L. (2020). Supporting the well-being of health care providers during the COVID-19 pandemic: The CopeColumbia response. General Hospital Psychiatry, 67, 62-69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2020.08.013