Abstract
Background
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Portraits is a hybridized art and medical intervention that lessens the alienating appearance of PPE through wearable, smiling headshot pictures. During the pandemic, the use of these portraits was expanded, but Canadian initiatives offered portraits only to immediate stakeholders. PPE Portraits Canada (PPC) aimed to provide PPE portraits to any Canadian healthcare institution and surveyed healthcare workers (HCW) regarding these portraits’ impact.
Methods
University student volunteers founded PPC via online platforms and coast-to-coast collaborations that allowed any HCW nationwide to request a free portrait via an accessible online form. PPC has gathered feedback from participating HCWs directly via an anonymous and bilingual survey.
Results
70% of HCWs wore their portraits “always” or “usually”, 69% of HCWs “definitely would” recommend their portrait, 89.5% of HCWs found that the PPE portraits made a difference in their experiences with patients and 74% found the same for their colleagues. The pre- and post-effect of the portraits, led to a 37.5% greater likelihood that HCWs felt “connected” or “very connected” to patients/residents. For the thematic analysis, 70% or more of the comments were rated as positive, with less than 5% of comments being rated as negative.
Conclusion
This model’s logistical framework can be expanded beyond PPE portraits to other initiatives with limited resources, allowing them to reach and positively impact diverse populations. HCW feedback was predominantly positive. The optimal design and impact of PPE portraits on patients and HCWs should be studied further to improve portrait adoption.
Funder
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
McGill University
TakingITGlobal
Surrey Memorial Hospital
University of Toronto
Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
Ontario Medical Student Association
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference8 articles.
1. Adverse effects of isolation in hospitalised patients: A systematic review;C Abad;Journal of Hospital Infection,2010
2. PPE portraits—a way to humanize personal protective equipment;C Brown-Johnson;Journal of General Internal Medicine,2020
3. Personal protective equipment portraits in the era of covid-19;C Hansen-Barkun;European Journal of Internal Medicine,2022
4. PPE Portraits Canada–Sharing the smile behind your PPE [Internet];R Ramendra,2021
5. Five ways to get a grip on organizational logistics, backends, and workflows;CR Ventrella;Canadian Medical Education Journal,2022