‘Care Under Pressure’: a realist review of interventions to tackle doctors’ mental ill-health and its impacts on the clinical workforce and patient care

Author:

Carrieri DanieleORCID,Briscoe Simon,Jackson Mark,Mattick Karen,Papoutsi Chrysanthi,Pearson Mark,Wong Geoffrey

Abstract

IntroductionMental ill-health is prevalent across all groups of health professionals and this is of great concern in many countries. In the UK, the mental health of the National Health Service (NHS) workforce is a major healthcare issue, leading to presenteeism, absenteeism and loss of staff from the workforce. Most interventions targeting doctors aim to increase their ‘productivity’ and ‘resilience’, placing responsibility for good mental health with doctors themselves and neglecting the organisational and structural contexts that may have a detrimental effect on doctors’ well-being. There is a need for approaches that are sensitive to the contextual complexities of mental ill-health in doctors, and that do not treat doctors as a uniform body, but allow distinctions to account for particular characteristics, such as specialty, career stage and different working environments.Methods and analysisOur project aims to understand how, why and in what contexts support interventions can be designed to minimise the incidence of doctors’ mental ill-health. We will conduct a realist review—a form of theory-driven interpretative systematic review—of interventions, drawing on diverse literature sources. The review will iteratively progress through five steps: (1) locate existing theories; (2) search for evidence; (3) select articles; (4) extract and organise data and (5) synthesise evidence and draw conclusions. The analysis will summarise how, why and in what circumstances doctors’ mental ill-health is likely to develop and what can remediate the situation. Throughout the project, we will also engage iteratively with diverse stakeholders in order to produce actionable theory.Ethics and disseminationEthical approval is not required for our review. Our dissemination strategy will be participatory. Tailored outputs will be targeted to: policy makers; NHS employers and healthcare leaders; team leaders; support organisations; doctors experiencing mental ill-health, their families and colleagues.PROSPERO registration numberCRD42017069870.

Funder

Health Services and Delivery Research Programme

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

Reference59 articles.

1. World Health Organisation (WHO). National health workforce accounts: a handbook. 2016 http://www.who.int/hrh/documents/brief_nhwfa_handbook/en/.

2. World Health Organisation (WHO). Health workforce—data and statistics. 2016 http://www.who.int/hrh/statistics/en/ (cited 12 Dec 2017).

3. Presenteeism in the New Zealand senior medical workforce-a mixed-methods analysis;Chambers;N Z Med J,2017

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