Magnavita Nicola, Meraglia Igor, Riccò Matteo
Occupational Epidemiology and Health Unit, Department of Life Sciences and Public Health, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Roma, Italy.
Prevention and Safety Service in Workplaces (SPSAL), Local Sanitary Unit of Reggio Emilia, Reggio Emilia, Italy.
AIMS Public Health. 2024 Dec 13;11(4):1223-1246. doi: 10.3934/publichealth.2024063. eCollection 2024.
Symptoms of anxiety and depression are very common among healthcare workers (HCWs) and could impact the quality of care.
This study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of these disorders in a public health company and their association with work ability and work-related stress.
A cross-sectional study involved 80 HCWs being treated for mental disorders (MD), 55 HCWs who said they suffered from MD but were not being treated, and 824 healthy colleagues. All workers completed the Work Ability Index (WAI), the Siegrist's Effort/Reward Imbalance questionnaire (ERI), the Goldberg's scales of anxiety and depression (GADS), and the Warr's scale of job satisfaction.
Three-quarters of workers with MD suffered from anxiety and/or depression. Workers who declared at the periodic medical examination in the workplace that they were being treated for MD had significantly lower levels of work ability than those of their colleagues who declared good mental health. They also reported greater work stress (high effort, low rewards, high overcommitment) and lower job satisfaction than their healthy colleagues. Symptomatic but untreated workers reported significantly lower work ability, lower satisfaction, and greater occupational stress than their healthy colleagues. In the entire sample, there were many workers with symptoms of anxiety or depression who did not declare these disorders during the examination. Overall, there were 328 suspected cases of anxiety (34.2%) and 334 cases of depression (34.8%). Anxious workers [ = 8.11, 95% confidence interval () = 3.74-17.58] and depressed workers ( = 4.49, 95% = 2.22-9.10) had an increased risk of being classified as having "poor work ability".
The negative association between psychological symptoms and work ability even in undiagnosed/untreated workers demonstrates the usefulness of screening for these symptoms in work environments.
焦虑和抑郁症状在医护人员中非常普遍,可能会影响护理质量。
本研究旨在评估一家公共卫生公司中这些疾病的患病率及其与工作能力和工作相关压力的关联。
一项横断面研究纳入了80名正在接受精神障碍治疗的医护人员、55名自称患有精神障碍但未接受治疗的医护人员以及824名健康同事。所有工作人员均完成了工作能力指数(WAI)、西格里斯特的努力/回报失衡问卷(ERI)、戈德堡焦虑和抑郁量表(GADS)以及沃尔工作满意度量表。
四分之三患有精神障碍的工作人员患有焦虑和/或抑郁。在工作场所定期体检时宣称正在接受精神障碍治疗的工作人员,其工作能力水平显著低于宣称心理健康良好的同事。他们还报告称工作压力更大(高努力、低回报、高过度投入),工作满意度低于健康同事。有症状但未接受治疗的工作人员报告的工作能力显著更低、满意度更低,职业压力比健康同事更大。在整个样本中,有许多有焦虑或抑郁症状的工作人员在检查期间未申报这些疾病。总体而言,有328例疑似焦虑病例(34.2%)和334例抑郁病例(34.8%)。焦虑的工作人员(比值比 = 8.11,95%置信区间(CI) = 3.74 - 17.58)和抑郁的工作人员(比值比 = 4.49,95%CI = 2.22 - 9.10)被归类为“工作能力差”的风险增加。
即使在未诊断/未治疗的工作人员中,心理症状与工作能力之间的负相关也表明在工作环境中筛查这些症状是有用的。