Qualitative interview study of strategies to support healthcare personnel mental health through an occupational health lens.
BMJ Open
; 14(1): e075920, 2024 01 11.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38216178
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND:
Employee Occupational Health ('occupational health') clinicians have expansive perspectives of the experience of healthcare personnel. Integrating mental health into the purview of occupational health is a newer approach that could combat historical limitations of healthcare personnel mental health programmes, which have been isolated and underused.OBJECTIVE:
We aimed to document innovation and opportunities for supporting healthcare personnel mental health through occupational health clinicians. This work was part of a national qualitative needs assessment of employee occupational health clinicians during COVID-19 who were very much at the centre of organisational responses.DESIGN:
This qualitative needs assessment included key informant interviews obtained using snowball sampling methods.PARTICIPANTS:
We interviewed 43 US Veterans Health Administration occupational health clinicians from 29 facilities.APPROACH:
This analysis focused on personnel mental health needs and opportunities, using consensus coding of interview transcripts and modified member checking. KEYRESULTS:
Three major opportunities to support mental health through occupational health involved (1) expanded mental health needs of healthcare personnel, including opportunities to support work-related concerns (eg, traumatic deployments), home-based concerns and bereavement (eg, working with chaplains); (2) leveraging expanded roles and protocols to address healthcare personnel mental health concerns, including opportunities in expanding occupational health roles, cross-disciplinary partnerships (eg, with employee assistance programmes (EAP)) and process/protocol (eg, acute suicidal ideation pathways) and (3) need for supporting occupational health clinicians' own mental health, including opportunities to address overwork/burn-out with adequate staffing/resources.CONCLUSIONS:
Occupational health can enact strategies to support personnel mental health to structurally sustain attention, use social cognition tools (eg, suicidality protocols or expanded job descriptions); to leverage distributed attention, enhance interdisciplinary collaboration (eg, chaplains for bereavement support or EAP) and to equip systems with resources and allow for flexibility during crises, including increased staffing.Palavras-chave
Texto completo:
1
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Saúde Mental
/
Saúde Ocupacional
Tipo de estudo:
Guideline
/
Qualitative_research
Limite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article