1
Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology, TeMS.C., Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran.
2
Health Equity Research Center, Shahed University, Tehran, Iran.
Abstract
Healthcare workers operate in environments characterized by heavy cognitive workload, ethical pressure, and repeated exposure to human suffering. Even under routine hospital conditions, medical staff, including physicians, nurses, and emergency personnel, face substantial psychological demands. Numerous studies have documented elevated levels of trauma-related symptoms among healthcare workers in high-intensity settings, such as emergency medicine, intensive care units, and trauma departments. Systematic reviews show that frontline clinicians often experience symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) due to cumulative exposure to critical incidents.
Mojtahed,M. and Hassanpour,H. (2025). Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Risk in Iranian Healthcare Personnel Exposed to War: An Overlooked Priority. (e5065). Immunoregulation, 8(1), e5065
MLA
Mojtahed,M. , and Hassanpour,H. . "Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Risk in Iranian Healthcare Personnel Exposed to War: An Overlooked Priority" .e5065 , Immunoregulation, 8, 1, 2025, e5065.
HARVARD
Mojtahed M., Hassanpour H. (2025). 'Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Risk in Iranian Healthcare Personnel Exposed to War: An Overlooked Priority', Immunoregulation, 8(1), e5065.
CHICAGO
M. Mojtahed and H. Hassanpour, "Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Risk in Iranian Healthcare Personnel Exposed to War: An Overlooked Priority," Immunoregulation, 8 1 (2025): e5065,
VANCOUVER
Mojtahed M., Hassanpour H. Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Risk in Iranian Healthcare Personnel Exposed to War: An Overlooked Priority. Immunoreg, 2025; 8(1): e5065.