Penticton Herald

Doctors struggling with burnout, anxiety

- By MAAN ALHMIDI

TORONTO — The well-being of physicians across Canada has significan­tly decreased with many doctors reporting poorer mental health than before the COVID-19 pandemic, a new survey suggests.

The Canadian Medical Associatio­n’s national physician health survey, released Thursday, indicates that 53 per cent of respondent­s reported symptoms of burnout, including emotional exhaustion.

The reported burnout rate among doctors was 1.7 times higher than it was in the associatio­n’s previous survey in 2017.

The survey suggests that one-quarter of respondent­s were experienci­ng severe or moderate anxiety and almost half of the respondent­s were struggling with depression.

Forty-nine per cent of physicians who participat­ed in the survey also indicated they were likely to reduce or modify their clinical hours in the next two years.

The associatio­n’s president, Dr. Alika Lafontaine, said the participan­ts’ responses “reflect the current state of the health-care system,” adding the COVID 19 pandemic exacerbate­d many challenges physicians have been facing for years.

“People pulling back full-time clinical practice, people doing different things in order to mitigate burnout, more pervasive negative sentiment towards the direction that the health-care system is going and then just how this is affecting certain types of physicians more... family physicians in particular are really struggling,” he said in a recent interview.

The online survey involved 4,121 physicians, medical residents and medical students who participat­ed between Oct. 13 and Dec. 13, 2021.

Lafontaine, who is a practising anesthesio­logist in Grande Prairie, Alta., said doctors are resilient but the stress levels they face are very high.

“We’ve been trained in situations where stress is a normal part of work,” he said. “We know that providing care in the medical system is a stressful job, but that stress has just completely gone out of control.”

The survey suggests 36 per cent of physicians have had thoughts of suicide at some point in their life, compared to 18 per cent of doctors saying they thought about suicide in 2017.

Fifty-seven per cent of all respondent­s said they always or often feel fatigued at work, and only 36 per cent of respondent­s saidthey always or often get optimal sleep.

Lafontaine said provincial government­s across Canada have had an “obsession with efficiency” over the last two decades, and health-care providers have not received the support they need to make sure their work environmen­ts are sustainabl­e.

He said health-care providers, administra­tors and government­s should start working toward pan-Canadian solutions.

“And then make sure that we have the right priorities: focusing on sustainabl­e work environmen­ts, making sure that high-quality, high-safety patient care is provided,” he said.

Lafontaine, who was recently elected as the first Indigenous president to the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, said the federal government can help by working toward more collaborat­ion in health human resources.

 ?? ?? The Canadian Press
A health-care worker walks past a thank you sign in the intensive care unit at the Humber River Hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto.
The Canadian Press A health-care worker walks past a thank you sign in the intensive care unit at the Humber River Hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto.

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