D. Carrieri, M. Pearson, K. Mattick, C. Papoutsi, S. Briscoe, G. Wong, M. Jackson
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The objectives were to review interventions to tackle doctors’ mental ill-health and its impact on the clinical workforce and patient care, drawing on diverse literature sources and engaging iteratively with diverse stakeholder perspectives to produce actionable theory; and recommendations that support the tailoring, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of contextually sensitive strategies to tackle mental ill-health and its impacts. Design Realist literature review consistent with the Realist And Meta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards quality and reporting standards. Data sources Bibliographic database searches were developed and conducted using MEDLINE (1946 to November week 4 2017), MEDLINE In-Process and Other Non-indexed Citations (1946 to 6 December 2017) and PsycINFO (1806 to November week 2 2017) (all via Ovid) and Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (1987 to 6 December 2017) (via ProQuest) on 6 December 2017. Further UK-based studies were identified by forwards and author citation searches, manual backwards citation searching and hand-searching relevant journal websites.\n\n Review methods We included all studies that focused on mental ill-health; all study designs; all health-care settings; all studies that included medical doctors/medical students; descriptions of interventions or resources that focus on improving mental ill-health and minimising its impacts; all mental health outcome measures, including absenteeism (doctors taking short-/long-term sick leave); presenteeism (doctors working despite being unwell); and workforce retention (doctors leaving the profession temporarily/permanently). Data were extracted from included articles and the data set was subjected to realist analysis to identify context–mechanism–outcome configurations. Results A total of 179 out of 3069 records were included. Most were from the USA (45%) and had been published since 2009 (74%). More included articles focused on structural-level interventions (33%) than individual-level interventions (21%), but most articles (46%) considered both levels. Most interventions focused on prevention, rather than treatment/screening, and most studies referred to doctors/physicians in general, rather than to specific specialties or career stages. Nineteen per cent of the included sources provided cost information and none reported a health economic analysis. The 19 context–mechanism–outcome configurations demonstrated that doctors were more likely to experience mental ill-health when they felt isolated or unable to do their job, and when they feared repercussions of help-seeking. Healthy staff were necessary for excellent patient care. Interventions emphasising relationships and belonging were more likely to promote well-being. Interventions creating a people-focused working culture, balancing positive/negative performance and acknowledging positive/negative aspects of a medical career helped doctors to thrive. The way that interventions were implemented seemed critically important. Doctors needed to have confidence in an intervention for the intervention to be effective. Limitations Variable quality of included literature; limited UK-based studies. Future work Use this evidence synthesis to refine, implement and evaluate interventions. Study registration \nThis study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42017069870.\n\n Funding \nThis project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full in Health Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 8, No. 19. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.","PeriodicalId":12880,"journal":{"name":"Health Services and Delivery Research","volume":"8 1","pages":"1-132"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"10","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Interventions to minimise doctors’ mental ill-health and its impacts on the workforce and patient care: the Care Under Pressure realist review\",\"authors\":\"D. Carrieri, M. Pearson, K. Mattick, C. Papoutsi, S. Briscoe, G. Wong, M. Jackson\",\"doi\":\"10.3310/hsdr08190\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Background The growing incidence of mental ill-health in health professionals, including doctors, is a global concern. Although a large body of literature exists on interventions that offer support, advice and/or treatment to sick doctors, it has not yet been synthesised in a way that takes account of the complexity and heterogeneity of the interventions, and the many dimensions (e.g. individual, organisational, sociocultural) of the problem. Objectives Our aim was to improve understanding of how, why and in what contexts mental health services and support interventions can be designed to minimise the incidence of doctors’ mental ill-health. The objectives were to review interventions to tackle doctors’ mental ill-health and its impact on the clinical workforce and patient care, drawing on diverse literature sources and engaging iteratively with diverse stakeholder perspectives to produce actionable theory; and recommendations that support the tailoring, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of contextually sensitive strategies to tackle mental ill-health and its impacts. Design Realist literature review consistent with the Realist And Meta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards quality and reporting standards. Data sources Bibliographic database searches were developed and conducted using MEDLINE (1946 to November week 4 2017), MEDLINE In-Process and Other Non-indexed Citations (1946 to 6 December 2017) and PsycINFO (1806 to November week 2 2017) (all via Ovid) and Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (1987 to 6 December 2017) (via ProQuest) on 6 December 2017. 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More included articles focused on structural-level interventions (33%) than individual-level interventions (21%), but most articles (46%) considered both levels. Most interventions focused on prevention, rather than treatment/screening, and most studies referred to doctors/physicians in general, rather than to specific specialties or career stages. Nineteen per cent of the included sources provided cost information and none reported a health economic analysis. The 19 context–mechanism–outcome configurations demonstrated that doctors were more likely to experience mental ill-health when they felt isolated or unable to do their job, and when they feared repercussions of help-seeking. Healthy staff were necessary for excellent patient care. Interventions emphasising relationships and belonging were more likely to promote well-being. Interventions creating a people-focused working culture, balancing positive/negative performance and acknowledging positive/negative aspects of a medical career helped doctors to thrive. The way that interventions were implemented seemed critically important. Doctors needed to have confidence in an intervention for the intervention to be effective. Limitations Variable quality of included literature; limited UK-based studies. Future work Use this evidence synthesis to refine, implement and evaluate interventions. Study registration \\nThis study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42017069870.\\n\\n Funding \\nThis project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full in Health Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 8, No. 19. 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引用次数: 10
摘要
背景包括医生在内的卫生专业人员的精神疾病发病率不断上升,这是一个全球关注的问题。尽管存在大量关于为患病医生提供支持、建议和/或治疗的干预措施的文献,但尚未综合考虑干预措施的复杂性和异质性,以及问题的许多方面(如个人、组织、社会文化)。目的我们的目的是提高对如何、为什么以及在什么情况下设计心理健康服务和支持干预措施的理解,以最大限度地降低医生心理疾病的发生率。目标是审查解决医生心理健康问题的干预措施及其对临床工作人员和患者护理的影响,利用不同的文献来源,反复与不同的利益相关者观点接触,以产生可操作的理论;以及支持制定、实施、监测和评估应对精神疾病及其影响的情境敏感战略的建议。设计现实主义文献综述与现实主义和元叙事证据综合:进化标准质量和报告标准一致。数据源2017年12月6日,使用MEDLINE(1946年至2017年11月第4周)、MEDLINE In Process和其他未编入索引的引文(1946年到2017年12日6日)、PsycINFO(1806年至2017月11月第2周)(均通过Ovid)和应用社会科学索引与摘要(1987年至2017年底6日)(通过ProQuest)开发并进行书目数据库搜索。通过转发和作者引文搜索、手动反向引文搜索和手动搜索相关期刊网站,确定了进一步的英国研究。回顾方法我们纳入了所有关注精神疾病的研究;所有研究设计;所有医疗机构;包括医生/医学生在内的所有研究;对专注于改善精神疾病健康并将其影响降至最低的干预措施或资源的描述;所有心理健康结果指标,包括缺勤(医生请短期/长期病假);在场主义(医生在身体不适的情况下工作);以及劳动力保留(医生暂时/永久离职)。从纳入的文章中提取数据,并对数据集进行现实主义分析,以确定背景-机制-结果配置。结果3069份记录中,共有179份被纳入。大多数来自美国(45%),自2009年以来出版(74%)。纳入的文章更多地关注结构层面的干预措施(33%),而不是个人层面的干预(21%),但大多数文章(46%)都考虑了这两个层面。大多数干预措施侧重于预防,而不是治疗/筛查,大多数研究涉及一般的医生/医生,而不是特定的专业或职业阶段。19%的纳入来源提供了成本信息,没有一个报告进行了健康经济分析。19种情境-机制-结果配置表明,当医生感到孤立或无法完成工作时,以及当他们担心寻求帮助的影响时,他们更有可能经历心理健康问题。健康的工作人员对于出色的病人护理是必要的。强调人际关系和归属感的干预措施更有可能促进幸福感。干预措施创造了一种以人为本的工作文化,平衡了积极/消极的表现,承认了医疗生涯的积极/消极方面,帮助医生茁壮成长。干预措施的实施方式似乎至关重要。医生需要对干预措施有信心,干预才会有效。局限性纳入文献的质量参差不齐;有限的英国研究。未来的工作利用这一证据综合来完善、实施和评估干预措施。研究注册本研究注册为PROSPERO CRD42017069870。资助该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)卫生服务和交付研究计划资助,并将在《卫生服务与交付研究》上全文发表;第8卷第19期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。
Interventions to minimise doctors’ mental ill-health and its impacts on the workforce and patient care: the Care Under Pressure realist review
Background The growing incidence of mental ill-health in health professionals, including doctors, is a global concern. Although a large body of literature exists on interventions that offer support, advice and/or treatment to sick doctors, it has not yet been synthesised in a way that takes account of the complexity and heterogeneity of the interventions, and the many dimensions (e.g. individual, organisational, sociocultural) of the problem. Objectives Our aim was to improve understanding of how, why and in what contexts mental health services and support interventions can be designed to minimise the incidence of doctors’ mental ill-health. The objectives were to review interventions to tackle doctors’ mental ill-health and its impact on the clinical workforce and patient care, drawing on diverse literature sources and engaging iteratively with diverse stakeholder perspectives to produce actionable theory; and recommendations that support the tailoring, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of contextually sensitive strategies to tackle mental ill-health and its impacts. Design Realist literature review consistent with the Realist And Meta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards quality and reporting standards. Data sources Bibliographic database searches were developed and conducted using MEDLINE (1946 to November week 4 2017), MEDLINE In-Process and Other Non-indexed Citations (1946 to 6 December 2017) and PsycINFO (1806 to November week 2 2017) (all via Ovid) and Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (1987 to 6 December 2017) (via ProQuest) on 6 December 2017. Further UK-based studies were identified by forwards and author citation searches, manual backwards citation searching and hand-searching relevant journal websites.
Review methods We included all studies that focused on mental ill-health; all study designs; all health-care settings; all studies that included medical doctors/medical students; descriptions of interventions or resources that focus on improving mental ill-health and minimising its impacts; all mental health outcome measures, including absenteeism (doctors taking short-/long-term sick leave); presenteeism (doctors working despite being unwell); and workforce retention (doctors leaving the profession temporarily/permanently). Data were extracted from included articles and the data set was subjected to realist analysis to identify context–mechanism–outcome configurations. Results A total of 179 out of 3069 records were included. Most were from the USA (45%) and had been published since 2009 (74%). More included articles focused on structural-level interventions (33%) than individual-level interventions (21%), but most articles (46%) considered both levels. Most interventions focused on prevention, rather than treatment/screening, and most studies referred to doctors/physicians in general, rather than to specific specialties or career stages. Nineteen per cent of the included sources provided cost information and none reported a health economic analysis. The 19 context–mechanism–outcome configurations demonstrated that doctors were more likely to experience mental ill-health when they felt isolated or unable to do their job, and when they feared repercussions of help-seeking. Healthy staff were necessary for excellent patient care. Interventions emphasising relationships and belonging were more likely to promote well-being. Interventions creating a people-focused working culture, balancing positive/negative performance and acknowledging positive/negative aspects of a medical career helped doctors to thrive. The way that interventions were implemented seemed critically important. Doctors needed to have confidence in an intervention for the intervention to be effective. Limitations Variable quality of included literature; limited UK-based studies. Future work Use this evidence synthesis to refine, implement and evaluate interventions. Study registration
This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42017069870.
Funding
This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full in Health Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 8, No. 19. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.