COVID-19大流行背景下卫生和社会保健工作者的心理社会风险和心理健康

Nadia Vilahur Chiaraviglio
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The new heroes of our times, fulfilling the Hippocratic Oath, providing care to those more in need, while taking health risks of uncertain nature to themselves and their closest relatives. Health and social care workers were frontline workers not only because of their closeness to the virus, but because of the distress and moral dilemmas they faced while seeing people die in isolation or having to choose between one respirator, and too many patients. The pandemic was officially declared over by WHO in May 2023, and the world has been eager to return to normality, to overcome, to forget. However, adverse effects on the mental health and wellbeing of health and social care workers, one of the largest and steadily growing occupational sectors in the EU, are likely to persist. Health and social care workers across the EU consistently reported poor work conditions and high rates of work-related stress in mid 2022, in as much as 56% of the workforce in the sector, as well as a higher prevalence of mental health problems, compared to professionals in any other sector of activity. There appears to be a concerning trend of increasing exposure to work-related psychosocial risk factors within this sector, with amplified job-demands and limited job resources peaking during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of us may experience another pandemic, arising under the current scenarios of climate alterations leading to disease vectors spreading in new areas, the return of old ones, and aggravated human transmission pathways. While we cannot fully predict what the next epidemic could be or how it will hit us, what can be said with high certainty is that caring for those who care, will undoubtedly increase our preparedness as a society in the face of future health emergencies and crises.  Safeguarding the mental health of workers in the health and social care sector will help retaining a critical workforce by improving their working conditions and wellbeing. It will ensure a better quality of care and patient safety, and ultimately increase the resilience of our health systems in the face of future outbreaks.  Public bodies such as the European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (EU-OSHA) are currently focusing their research efforts on further understanding and documenting the evidence on the multiple risks- including chemical, physical and psychosocial hazards -experienced by workers in the human health and social care activities sector, and their complex interplay. One ongoing project is quantifying the burden of adverse mental health outcomes measured with validated clinical scales from the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic until mid-2023. Results shows very high prevalences for many mental health problems and conditions across the sector, also in their more severe clinical forms, and identifies sub-groups at potentially higher risk of suffering mental health problems in a female-dominated sector. Furthermore, it systematically maps and assesses the range of interventions conducted since 2020 to increase psychosocial wellbeing and prevent and manage mental health problems in the sector, to offer practical guidance and a range of scalable examples to workplaces.  In summary, widescale and long-term systemic interventions are needed, combining organizational and individual focused approaches to protect workers from the challenges for their mental wellbeing posed by complex and changing work environments. Further investment is necessary to ensure decent work conditions in all professions in the sector. Specific training of young professionals entering the labour market should focus on increasing awareness on occupational safety and health, particularly addressing work-related psychosocial risks, and support the destigmatization of mental health at work in the medical professions, creating a supportive culture towards mental health problems. Maybe some fundamental changes are underway. Signals such as the recent adoption in June 2022 by the International Labour Organization (ILO) in its International Labour Conference (ILC), at its 110th Session, of the Resolution on the inclusion of a safe and healthy working environment in the ILO's framework of fundamental principles and rights at work, strongly reaffirms the constitutional principle of the protection of workers' safety and health. The historic decision, expressed and supported by the ILO tripartite constituents, reveals a renewed collective commitment to the protection of life and health at work, embodying this dimension as a fifth category of fundamental principles and rights at work.</p>","PeriodicalId":101300,"journal":{"name":"Archivos de prevencion de riesgos laborales","volume":"27 3","pages":"229-232"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Psychosocial risks and mental health of health and social care workers in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.\",\"authors\":\"Nadia Vilahur Chiaraviglio\",\"doi\":\"10.12961/aprl.2024.27.03.01\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Certainly, our perception of the world we live in has changed since COVID-19 irrupted in our lives in March 2020. 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Health and social care workers were frontline workers not only because of their closeness to the virus, but because of the distress and moral dilemmas they faced while seeing people die in isolation or having to choose between one respirator, and too many patients. The pandemic was officially declared over by WHO in May 2023, and the world has been eager to return to normality, to overcome, to forget. However, adverse effects on the mental health and wellbeing of health and social care workers, one of the largest and steadily growing occupational sectors in the EU, are likely to persist. Health and social care workers across the EU consistently reported poor work conditions and high rates of work-related stress in mid 2022, in as much as 56% of the workforce in the sector, as well as a higher prevalence of mental health problems, compared to professionals in any other sector of activity. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

当然,自2020年3月COVID-19闯入我们的生活以来,我们对生活的世界的看法发生了变化。尽管我们拥有全球最发达的卫生系统之一,但我们作为个人的脆弱性和作为一个社会在管理未知边界的突发卫生事件方面缺乏准备的确凿证据动摇了我们在欧洲大陆的许多确定性。关于COVID-19已经说了很多,但在我的记忆中,关于工人和职业安全与健康的讨论从未如此之多,这一次成为头条新闻。在西班牙,医生、护士、执业护士、医师助理、医务辅助人员等保健工作者每天都受到赞扬。我们这个时代的新英雄,履行希波克拉底誓言,为更需要帮助的人提供护理,同时为自己和亲人承担不确定的健康风险。卫生和社会护理工作者之所以成为一线工作者,不仅是因为他们与病毒的接触,还因为他们在看到人们在隔离中死亡或不得不在一个呼吸器和太多病人之间做出选择时所面临的痛苦和道德困境。世卫组织于2023年5月正式宣布大流行结束,世界一直渴望恢复正常,克服困难,忘记过去。然而,卫生和社会护理工作者是欧盟最大和稳步增长的职业部门之一,对他们的心理健康和福祉的不利影响可能会持续存在。整个欧盟的卫生和社会护理工作者一直报告说,到2022年中期,该部门多达56%的劳动力的工作条件恶劣,工作压力高,而且与任何其他活动部门的专业人员相比,心理健康问题的发生率更高。该行业似乎出现了一个令人担忧的趋势,即越来越多地接触与工作相关的社会心理风险因素,在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,工作需求扩大,工作资源有限。我们中的许多人可能会经历另一场大流行,这是在目前气候变化导致疾病媒介在新地区传播、旧地区回归以及人类传播途径恶化的情况下发生的。虽然我们无法完全预测下一次流行病可能是什么,或者它将如何袭击我们,但可以非常肯定地说,照顾那些关心的人,无疑将增强我们作为一个社会面对未来卫生紧急情况和危机的准备。保障卫生和社会保健部门工作人员的心理健康将有助于通过改善他们的工作条件和福利来留住关键劳动力。它将确保更好的护理质量和患者安全,并最终增强我们卫生系统面对未来疫情的抵御能力。欧洲工作安全与健康机构等公共机构目前的研究重点是进一步了解和记录有关人类健康和社会保健活动部门工人所经历的多重风险(包括化学、身体和心理危害)及其复杂相互作用的证据。一个正在进行的项目是量化从COVID-19大流行开始到2023年年中使用有效临床量表测量的不良心理健康结果的负担。结果显示,在整个行业中,许多心理健康问题和状况的患病率非常高,其临床形式也较为严重,并确定了在女性占主导地位的行业中,可能面临更高心理健康问题风险的亚群体。此外,它系统地绘制和评估了自2020年以来开展的一系列干预措施,以增加社会心理健康,预防和管理该部门的精神健康问题,为工作场所提供实际指导和一系列可扩展的例子。总之,需要采取大规模和长期的系统干预措施,结合组织和个人的重点方法,保护工人免受复杂和不断变化的工作环境对其心理健康造成的挑战。有必要进一步投资,以确保该部门所有职业的体面工作条件。对进入劳动力市场的年轻专业人员的具体培训应侧重于提高对职业安全和健康的认识,特别是解决与工作有关的社会心理风险,并支持在医疗专业工作中消除对精神健康的污名化,创造一种支持精神健康问题的文化。也许一些根本性的变化正在发生。 最近,国际劳工组织(劳工组织)在其国际劳工大会(劳工大会)第110届会议上于2022年6月通过了关于将安全和健康的工作环境纳入劳工组织工作基本原则和权利框架的决议等信号,有力地重申了保护工人安全和健康的宪法原则。这一历史性决定得到了劳工组织三方成员的表达和支持,显示了对保护工作中的生命和健康的新的集体承诺,体现了这一层面作为工作中的第五类基本原则和权利。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Psychosocial risks and mental health of health and social care workers in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Certainly, our perception of the world we live in has changed since COVID-19 irrupted in our lives in March 2020. Many of our certainties in the European continent were shaked by the unequivocal evidence of our vulnerability as individuals and our lack of preparedness as a society to manage a health emergency of unknown boundaries, despite having one of the most well-developed health systems across the globe. Much has been said about COVID-19, but never as I can remember, so much has been said about workers, and occupational safety and health, for once, hit the headlines. Healthcare workers - physicians, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, paramedical workers and alike were applauded daily, in Spain. The new heroes of our times, fulfilling the Hippocratic Oath, providing care to those more in need, while taking health risks of uncertain nature to themselves and their closest relatives. Health and social care workers were frontline workers not only because of their closeness to the virus, but because of the distress and moral dilemmas they faced while seeing people die in isolation or having to choose between one respirator, and too many patients. The pandemic was officially declared over by WHO in May 2023, and the world has been eager to return to normality, to overcome, to forget. However, adverse effects on the mental health and wellbeing of health and social care workers, one of the largest and steadily growing occupational sectors in the EU, are likely to persist. Health and social care workers across the EU consistently reported poor work conditions and high rates of work-related stress in mid 2022, in as much as 56% of the workforce in the sector, as well as a higher prevalence of mental health problems, compared to professionals in any other sector of activity. There appears to be a concerning trend of increasing exposure to work-related psychosocial risk factors within this sector, with amplified job-demands and limited job resources peaking during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of us may experience another pandemic, arising under the current scenarios of climate alterations leading to disease vectors spreading in new areas, the return of old ones, and aggravated human transmission pathways. While we cannot fully predict what the next epidemic could be or how it will hit us, what can be said with high certainty is that caring for those who care, will undoubtedly increase our preparedness as a society in the face of future health emergencies and crises.  Safeguarding the mental health of workers in the health and social care sector will help retaining a critical workforce by improving their working conditions and wellbeing. It will ensure a better quality of care and patient safety, and ultimately increase the resilience of our health systems in the face of future outbreaks.  Public bodies such as the European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (EU-OSHA) are currently focusing their research efforts on further understanding and documenting the evidence on the multiple risks- including chemical, physical and psychosocial hazards -experienced by workers in the human health and social care activities sector, and their complex interplay. One ongoing project is quantifying the burden of adverse mental health outcomes measured with validated clinical scales from the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic until mid-2023. Results shows very high prevalences for many mental health problems and conditions across the sector, also in their more severe clinical forms, and identifies sub-groups at potentially higher risk of suffering mental health problems in a female-dominated sector. Furthermore, it systematically maps and assesses the range of interventions conducted since 2020 to increase psychosocial wellbeing and prevent and manage mental health problems in the sector, to offer practical guidance and a range of scalable examples to workplaces.  In summary, widescale and long-term systemic interventions are needed, combining organizational and individual focused approaches to protect workers from the challenges for their mental wellbeing posed by complex and changing work environments. Further investment is necessary to ensure decent work conditions in all professions in the sector. Specific training of young professionals entering the labour market should focus on increasing awareness on occupational safety and health, particularly addressing work-related psychosocial risks, and support the destigmatization of mental health at work in the medical professions, creating a supportive culture towards mental health problems. Maybe some fundamental changes are underway. Signals such as the recent adoption in June 2022 by the International Labour Organization (ILO) in its International Labour Conference (ILC), at its 110th Session, of the Resolution on the inclusion of a safe and healthy working environment in the ILO's framework of fundamental principles and rights at work, strongly reaffirms the constitutional principle of the protection of workers' safety and health. The historic decision, expressed and supported by the ILO tripartite constituents, reveals a renewed collective commitment to the protection of life and health at work, embodying this dimension as a fifth category of fundamental principles and rights at work.

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