UK doctors' mental health declined amid COVID-19, seek govt support
In the U.K., nearly half of doctors report experiencing worse mental health now compared to the COVID-19 period. (Shutterstock Photo)


In the U.K., nearly half of doctors report experiencing deteriorating mental health now compared to the period during COVID-19.

The Medical Protection Society (MPS) surveyed 861 doctors and found 46% were worse off psychologically than during the pandemic due to work pressure, rising demand, and staffing issues in the NHS.

It comes after NHS England pledged to share 2.3 million pounds ($2.96 million) between seven regions to maintain 40 NHS staff mental health and well-being hubs, which were set up in 2021 to provide workers with fast and easy access to support.

However, the MPS said a freedom of information request by the British Psychological Society found 40 million pounds would be required to run the sites.

Of those surveyed by MPS, 75% did not believe the government is doing enough to help healthcare workers when it comes to mental health, while 43% are worried about their future careers due to concerns about well-being.

More than three-quarters (76%) said staff shortages make taking time off to deal with their issues hard.

Some 43% of doctors said "being unable to do the right thing for patients" impacts their mental health. Elsewhere, 47% said they were concerned about the impact of burnout on patient safety, and 40% said working long hours is affecting their mental well-being.

A doctor who participated in the survey said, "Pressures across NHS secondary, primary, and social care, and the hemorrhaging of experienced staff at every level make the job increasingly impossible and fear of serious incidents, things going wrong, a sense of lurching from crisis to crisis with little or no respite, is taking its toll."

"I am considering early retirement – far earlier than planned. I do think this will be a sad loss both for myself and the NHS services, as I have considerable experience and expertise. But I have my health, well-being and family to consider as well."

Professor Dame Jane Dacre, MPS president, said the mental health and well-being hubs "provide desperately needed support to staff" with various issues, including anxiety and depression.

Dacre added: "Demand for support with mental health issues is still high. Nearly half of our members tell us their mental health is worse now than it was during the pandemic, and a similar amount is reconsidering their future in healthcare due to mental health concerns."

"We are also seeing more staff absent from work due to mental health issues than ever before."

"It, therefore, seems absolutely the wrong time to scale back mental health provision for health care staff and risk the sustainability of an established network of hubs that are crucial in supporting mental well-being and retention."

"We urge the government to consider providing sustainable funding to strengthen the hubs. While retention is complex and multifaceted, investment in mental health support for staff is a fundamental pillar."

Sarb Bajwa, chief executive at the British Psychological Society, said, "These shocking – but sadly not surprising – findings once again highlight the urgent need for the ongoing, dedicated mental health support that the hubs provide."

"It's clear the health and social care workforce is running on empty, and they deserve better than a drastically reduced service that's unable to meet demand due to short-sighted funding arrangements."

Last week, data published by NHS Digital revealed 24.2% of sick days across the health service in March 2023 were due to anxiety, stress, depression or other psychiatric illnesses.

The figure was 24.6% in February and 23.3% in January.

Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive of NHS Providers, said the likes of staff shortages, operational pressures and demand on health care services "take a huge toll on the psychological well-being of staff across the hospital, ambulance, mental health and community services."

"Trust leaders are deeply worried about this and are doing all they can do support staff and cover sickness absences, but their efforts will only go so far without national support," she added.

"A lack of government funding has led to the recent widespread closure of well-being hubs, leaving many NHS staff without access to crucial mental health services."

"Staff well-being is the lifeblood of the health service and helps ensure the best patient care. Proper government funding and support for it must therefore be non-negotiable."