Qualitative interview study of strategies to support healthcare personnel mental health through an occupational health lens

被引:2
|
作者
Brown-Johnson, Cati [1 ,2 ]
Deshields, Cheyenne [3 ]
McCaa, Matthew [1 ]
Connell, Natalie [4 ]
Giannitrapani, Susan N. [5 ]
Thanassi, Wendy [2 ,6 ]
Yano, Elizabeth M. [7 ,8 ,9 ]
Singer, Sara J. [1 ,2 ]
Lorenz, Karl A. [1 ,2 ]
Giannitrapani, Karleen [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Ctr Innovat Implementat, VA Palo Alto Hlth Care Syst, Menlo Pk, CA 94304 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[3] Case Western Reserve Univ, Cleveland, OH USA
[4] Emory Univ, Sch Med, Atlanta, GA USA
[5] Wilmington VA Med Ctr, Employee Occupat Hlth, Wilmington, DE USA
[6] Occupat Hlth Serv, VA Palo Alto Hlth Care Syst, Palo Alto, CA USA
[7] VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare Syst, VA Greater Angeles Healthcare Syst, Los Angeles, CA USA
[8] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Fielding Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Policy & Management, Los Angeles, CA USA
[9] Geffen Sch Med, Dept Med, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA USA
来源
BMJ OPEN | 2024年 / 14卷 / 01期
关键词
MENTAL HEALTH; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; OCCUPATIONAL & INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE; WORKERS;
D O I
10.1136/bmjopen-2023-075920
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
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. Key results 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.
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页数:8
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