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Work-related impacts on doctors’ mental health: a qualitative study exploring organisational and systems-level risk factors

Authors :
Paul R Ward
Sharon Lawn
Alison Weightman
Belinda Lunnay
Kristen Foley
Michael Baigent
Diana Lawrence
Virginia Drummond
Mandi Baker
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 14, Iss 11 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2024.

Abstract

Background Protecting doctors’ mental health has typically focused on individuals, rather than addressing organisational and structural-level factors in the work environment.Objectives This study uses the socioecological model (SEM) to illuminate and explore how these broader factors inform the mental health of individual doctors.Design Semi-structured interviews (20–25 hours) and ethnographic observations (90 hours) involving work shadowing doctors (n=14).Participants Doctors representing various career stages, specialty areas, genders and cultural backgrounds.Setting Three specialties in a public South Australian hospital. Thematic analysis revealed work-related risk factors for poor mental health.Results The SEM framework was used to analyse the work environment’s impact on doctors’ mental health. The analysis identified how the layers interconnect to influence risk factors for individual doctors. Microsystem: lack of control over career advancement, disenfranchisement due to understaffing and concerns about handling complex cases relative to experience. Mesosystem: negative impacts of shift work and fragmented teams, leading doctors to absorb pressure despite exhaustion to maintain professional credibility. Exosystem: high patient loads with time constraints and geographical limitations hindering care delivery, compounded by administrative burdens. Macrosystem: the commercialisation of medicine emphasising corporatisation and bureaucratic processes, which devalues professional autonomy.Conclusions This study highlights how doctors experience layers of interconnected factors that compromise their mental health but over which they have very little control. Interventions must therefore address these issues at organisational and systemic levels, for which starting points evident within our data are identified.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
14
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fd6302f4e3740edb5619ba0adf1dc7a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-088283