

Healthcare Workers and Trauma: Coping with Depression, Anxiety, and PTSD from COVID-19
The COVID-19 pandemic has taken a devastating toll on frontline workers — not only physically, but emotionally and mentally. Nurses, doctors, chaplains, and caregivers have carried the burden of loss, isolation, and trauma, often while working without rest or adequate protection.
In this episode, chaplain and mindfulness instructor Christy shares her firsthand experience supporting patients, families, and healthcare workers during the pandemic. From complicated grief and burnout to the early signs of depression, anxiety, and PTSD, Christy describes what it’s really like on the COVID-19 frontline.
This powerful conversation explores how healthcare workers can cope with trauma, why self-care is not optional, and how compassion, solidarity, and connection are key to surviving — and healing from — this crisis.
Link to article #1: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/07/coronavirus-special-mental-health-disaster/613510/
Link to article #2: https://time.com/5817435/covid-19-mental-health-coronavirus/
Primary Topics Covered:
- The mental health toll of COVID-19 on frontline workers
- Why nurses, doctors, and caregivers are at higher risk of PTSD and depression
- How chaplains and spiritual care providers support both patients and staff
- The weight of grief: patients dying without family at their side
- Complicated emotions for healthcare workers (fear, gratitude, overwhelm)
- The importance of self-care, peer support, and professional mental health care
- Post-traumatic stress vs. post-traumatic growth in healthcare settings
- Why compassion, solidarity, and nurturing self-talk matter now more than ever
Timestamps:
00:00 – Introduction: The mental health impact of COVID-19
01:17 – Comparing COVID-19 with the SARS outbreak and its psychiatric aftermath
02:24 – Focus on healthcare workers: guest chaplain Christy’s perspective
03:36 – Emotional overwhelm and the weight of social injustice
04:46 – Shifting from supporting patients to supporting staff as well
05:58 – Isolation, mortality, and grief in hospitals
07:15 – Early signs of PTSD in frontline workers — even caregivers themselves
08:04 – Potential for both post-traumatic stress and post-traumatic growth
09:37 – Loss of connection and the difficulty of grieving without touch
12:00 – Nurses and doctors share their “complicated” feelings about the pandemic
13:54 – What frontline workers can do to reduce mental health risks
14:48 – The essential role of self-care and nurturing self-talk
15:30 – A message of hope: courage, compassion, and light in the darkness
16:37 – How we can continue to support frontline workers after the crisis
18:20 – Closing reflections: tending to ourselves while caring for others
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