Daily Trust

We are burnout, doctors cry out

- By Judd-Leonard Okafor

Doctors are facing serious burnout on their jobs, but the problems remains ignored to a large extent, the Associatio­n of Resident Doctors has said.

The burnout-a long-term stress reaction marked by emotional exhaustion, depersonal­ization, and a lack of sense of personal accomplish­menthas been linked to the pressure of clinical medicine, specific job, the pressure of life and work, the conditioni­ng of medical education and the leadership skills of their immediate supervisor­s.

Resident doctors, who are required to be physically resident in hospitals, are the worst hit.

The associatio­n says duties of physicians put them at risk of varying health challenges from hypertensi­on, anxiety, and psychosis to even drug and substance abuse and ultimately suicide.

“We are made to attend to varying number of patients on daily basis and work for over 24hours straight in many instances just to get the work done,” it told a briefing in Abuja on Monday.

“This has a direct consequenc­e on the quality of services rendered and make us prone to mistakes which are avoidable if things are done well.”

The associatio­n has scheduled physicians’ burnout as a topical issue to be considered in its ongoing annual health week and scientific conference, alongside current management of clinical depression and mental health, insisting that neglect for mental health is a threat to society.

Doctors in the FCT are under pressure to deal with growing patient load, with many on call duty spending up to 48 hours at a stretch at work-and locum doctors paid as little as N50,000 a month, a pay the associatio­n described as “embarrassi­ng.”

“People are leaving and a whole lot of doctors or healthwork­ers are not being employed to fill these spaces,” Dr Roland Aigbovo, president of FCT chapter of ARD, told Daily Trust.

With more than 80,000 doctors registered by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria as at September, he said, only 25,000 of them are practising in Nigeria.

 ??  ?? Women harvest beans during a visit by the Commission­er, Borno State Ministry of Agricultur­e and Natural Resources, Engr. Bukar Talba with other top officials of the ministry and an expert on dry season farming, Engr. Abatcha Jarawa to the 135 hectares of beans farms in Auno Konduga L.G.A of Borno State
Women harvest beans during a visit by the Commission­er, Borno State Ministry of Agricultur­e and Natural Resources, Engr. Bukar Talba with other top officials of the ministry and an expert on dry season farming, Engr. Abatcha Jarawa to the 135 hectares of beans farms in Auno Konduga L.G.A of Borno State

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