The global impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on clinical radiography practice: A systematic literature review and recommendations for future services planning
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Radiography
Abstract
Introduction: Worldwide, reports and experiences indicate that there has been extensive re-organisation
within diagnostic imaging and radiotherapy departments in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. This
was necessary due to changes in workload and working practice guidelines that have evolved during the
pandemic. This review provides a comprehensive summary of the global impact of the COVID-19
pandemic on radiography practice, service delivery and workforce wellbeing.
Methods: A systematic review methodology was adopted to obtain data from primary studies of qualitative,
quantitative, and mixed methods designs from databases (PubMed, Science Direct, Cumulative
Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature [CINAHL], and SCOPUS: all 2020 to present). The included
articles were subjected to information extraction and results-based convergent synthesis.
Results: The electronic database search yielded 10,420 articles after removal of duplicates. Of these, 31
articles met the final inclusion criteria with some (n ¼ 8) fully focussed on radiotherapy workforce and
service delivery. The pandemic impact on radiography practice is broadly themed around: training,
communication, and information dissemination; infrastructure, technology, and clinical workflow; and
workforce mental health and well-being.
Conclusion: Globally, most radiographers received inadequate training for managing COVID-19 patients
during the initial acute phase of the pandemic. Additionally, there were significant changes to clinical
practice, working patterns and perceived increase in workload due to surges in COVID-19 patients and
the consequent strict adherence to new infection protocols. These changes, coupled with fear emanating
from the increased risk of the workforce to contracting the infection, contributed to anxiety and
workplace-related stress during the pandemic.
Implications for practice: Local pandemic response strategies must be appropriately developed from
standard protocols in readiness for safe clinical practice and well-being management training of
practitioners.
Crown Copyright © 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The College of Radiographers. All rights
reserved.
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Research Article