Director, Policy and Research, Association of Salaried Medical Specialists, PO Box 10763, Wellington, 6143, New Zealand.
University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand.
BMC Psychiatry. 2022 Jun 6;22(1):380. doi: 10.1186/s12888-022-03980-6.
Demand for mental health services in New Zealand and internationally is growing. Little is known about how psychiatrists are faring in this environment. This study aimed to investigate wellbeing of psychiatrists working in the public health system in New Zealand, identify the main risk factors for work-related stress, gauge perceptions of how workload has changed over time, assess job satisfaction and whether individuals intend or desire to leave their work.
Psychiatrists working in New Zealand who were also members of the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists were invited to participate in an online survey. Main outcome measures were degree of burnout and stress experienced at work. Supplementary measures included perceived workplace demands and levels of support. Predictor variables included perceptions of changes to workloads over time, degree of job satisfaction and intentions to leave work. Logistic regression assessed characteristics associated with burnout and job satisfaction as well as intentions to leave work. Free text comments were analysed thematically alongside quantitative trends.
368/526 responded (70% response rate). 34.6% met the criteria for burnout and 35.3% scored with high work stress. There were no significant patterns of association with demographic variables but significant correlation with all but one predictor variable; having experienced a change to the demands of the on-call workload. 45% agreed they would leave their current job if able and 87% disagreed that they are working in a well-resourced mental health service. Respondents emphasised the impact of growing workloads and expressed concerns about their ability to provide optimal care in these circumstances.
High burnout appears to affect one in three psychiatrists in New Zealand. Many attribute their feelings of burnout to demand for their services. These findings may assist with better workforce planning for psychiatry and emphasises potential consequences of demand for and poor resourcing of mental health services for the retention and wellbeing of doctors in psychiatry worldwide.
新西兰和国际上对心理健康服务的需求正在增长。对于在这种环境下精神科医生的工作情况知之甚少。本研究旨在调查在新西兰公共卫生系统工作的精神科医生的幸福感,确定与工作相关压力的主要风险因素,评估随着时间的推移工作量变化的看法,评估工作满意度以及个人是否有意或渴望离开工作。
邀请在新西兰工作且也是薪俸医学专家协会成员的精神科医生参加在线调查。主要观察指标是工作中的倦怠和压力程度。补充指标包括感知到的工作场所需求和支持水平。预测变量包括对工作时间的变化、工作满意度和离职意愿的看法。逻辑回归评估了与倦怠和工作满意度以及离职意愿相关的特征。对自由文本评论进行了主题分析,并结合定量趋势进行了分析。
368/526 人回应(70%的回应率)。34.6%的人符合倦怠标准,35.3%的人工作压力大。与人口统计学变量无显著关联模式,但与除一个预测变量外的所有变量均有显著相关性;经历了轮班工作量需求的变化。45%的人表示如果有可能,他们会离开目前的工作,而 87%的人不同意他们在资源充足的心理健康服务机构工作。受访者强调了工作量增加的影响,并对他们在这种情况下提供最佳护理的能力表示关注。
高倦怠似乎影响了新西兰三分之一的精神科医生。许多人将他们的倦怠感归因于对他们服务的需求。这些发现可能有助于更好地为精神病学规划劳动力,并强调对心理健康服务的需求和资源不足对全球精神病学医生的保留和幸福感的潜在影响。