Gonzalo, Rodriguez-MenéndezAna, Rubio-GarcíaPatricia, Conde-AlvarezLaura, Armesto-LuqueNathalia, Garrido-TorresLuis, CapitanAsuncion, LuqueMiguel, Ruiz-VeguillaBenedicto, Crespo-Facorro2023-02-092023-02-092020-09-24http://hdl.handle.net/10668/16360The aims of this study were to evaluate the short-term impact of 2019-nCoV outbreak on the mental/psychological state of Spaniard health care workers (HCWs) and to explore the influencing factors, including organizational factors. A web-based survey (Google forms questionnaire) spread via professional and scientific associations, professional WhatsApp and email lists, following a snowball technique was used. Data were collected from May 11th and May 31st, 2020 RESULTS: : A total of 1407 subjects were included in final analyses. 24.7% (348 out of 1407) of HCWs reported symptoms of acute stress (SARS-Q measurement) and 53.6% (754 out of 1407) reported symptoms related to poorer general health (GHQ-28 measurement). A higher risk of having an acute stress disorder was associated to being female, not having access to protective material, and several subjects´ perceived risks. Additionally, poorer overall general health (GHQ>24) was related to being female, working in a geographical area with a high incidence of infection, not being listened to by your co-workers, having a greater perception of stress at work and being able to transmit the infection to others. We must consider a likely memory bias. The high prevalence of affective and general health symptoms among the HCWs and the critical influence of organizational issues and subjects´ perceived risk should lead health authorities to design future strategies to protect health professional force for facing a potential upcoming epidemiological crisis.enAcute stress symptomsCOVID-19Health care workersOrganizational factorsAdultAttitude of Health PersonnelCOVID-19Cross-Sectional StudiesEmotionsFemaleHealth PersonnelHumansMaleMental DisordersMiddle AgedPandemicsPrevalenceSpainSurveys and QuestionnairesShort-term emotional impact of COVID-19 pandemic on Spaniard health workers.research article33007629open access10.1016/j.jad.2020.09.0791573-2517PMC7834676https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2020.09.079https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7834676/pdf