Bartram Mary, Leslie Kathleen, Atanackovic Jelena, Tulk Christine, Chamberland-Rowe Caroline, Bourgeault Ivy Lynn
Mental Health Commission of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
1349Athabasca University, Athabasca, Alberta, Canada.
Healthc Manage Forum. 2023 Jan;36(1):42-48. doi: 10.1177/08404704221112035. Epub 2022 Jul 14.
The Mental Health and Substance Use Health (MHSUH) impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic are proving to be significant, complex, and long-lasting. The MHSUH workforce-including psychologists, social workers, psychotherapists, addiction counsellors, and peer support workers as well as psychiatrists, family physicians, and nurses-is the backbone of the response. As health leaders consider how to address long-standing and emerging health workforce challenges, there is an opportunity to move the MHSUH workforce out from the shadows through full inclusion in health workforce planning in Canada. After first examining the roots and consequences of the long-standing exclusion of the MHSUH workforce, this paper presents findings from a recent study showing how the pandemic has compounded MHSUH workforce capacity issues. Priorities for MHSUH workforce action by health leaders include closing regulation gaps, engaging the public and private sectors in coordinated planning, and accelerating data collection through a central health workforce registry.
事实证明,新冠疫情对心理健康和物质使用健康(MHSUH)产生了重大、复杂且持久的影响。心理健康和物质使用健康领域的工作人员——包括心理学家、社会工作者、心理治疗师、成瘾咨询师、同伴支持工作者以及精神科医生、家庭医生和护士——是应对工作的中坚力量。在卫生领域领导者思考如何应对长期存在以及新出现的卫生人力挑战之际,有机会通过将心理健康和物质使用健康领域的工作人员全面纳入加拿大卫生人力规划,使其走出阴影。在首先审视长期排斥心理健康和物质使用健康领域工作人员的根源及后果之后,本文呈现了一项近期研究的结果,该研究展示了疫情如何使心理健康和物质使用健康领域的人力问题更加复杂。卫生领域领导者针对心理健康和物质使用健康领域工作人员采取行动的优先事项包括填补监管空白、让公共和私营部门参与协同规划,以及通过中央卫生人力登记处加快数据收集。