Calgary Herald

Many Canadian nurses struggle with PTSD, depression: report

- LYNN GIESBRECHT lgiesbrech­t@postmedia.com

REGINA A third of Canadian nurses show symptoms of depression and nearly a quarter have symptoms of PTSD, according to a new national study — led by a Regina team — examining the mental health of nurses.

The findings, which Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (CFNU) president Linda Silas called “quite disturbing,” showed that rates of mental illness among nurses were just as high as in public service personnel like police and paramedics.

“Getting those numbers was hard,” said Silas. “In some areas, it’s worse than the public safety personnel.”

The study was conducted by University of Regina researcher­s Andrea Stelnicki and Nicholas Carleton in collaborat­ion with the CFNU, and the study’s report was released Tuesday.

More than 7,300 nurses across the country were surveyed in 2019, so the results do not reflect the COVID-19 pandemic.

Carleton, a psychology professor at the U of R and scientific director for the Canadian Institute for Public Safety Research and Treatment (CIPSRT), presented the findings of the study via a Facebook Live presentati­on together with Stelnicki and Silas.

The study found that 36 per cent of nurses who took the survey had symptoms of depression, 23 per cent of PTSD and 26 per cent of Generalize­d Anxiety Disorder.

Nurses’ rates of burnout are also high, with 63 per cent of nurses experienci­ng some burnout and 29 per cent experienci­ng clinical burnout, according to the study.

The data also showed more nurses than other front line workers exhibit suicidal behaviours, with 33 per cent of nurses saying at some point in their life they have thought about suicide, 17 per cent saying they have planned to die by suicide and eight per cent saying they have attempted suicide.

“We’ve been hearing anecdotall­y from nurses ... how bad things have really been for them, but I think in some aspects we were a little bit surprised to see particular­ly how high the rates of depression and anxiety and panic disorder were,” said Stelnicki, a post-doctoral fellow at the U of R.

Carleton noted that while the study used industry-standard practices to screen for mental health disorders, the findings cannot represent confirmed diagnoses.

What Silas finds particular­ly troubling is that a quarter of nurses surveyed said they have not sought any kind of mental health support, even if only friends and family.

“We have a lot of work to erase the stigma and provide the appropriat­e help to nurses,” she said.

The report revealed several main pressures nurses face.

Nearly half said being short staffed was a source of extreme stress. Physical assault was the most commonly reported traumatic event for nurses, with a staggering 93 per cent saying they have been physically assaulted at work. Nearly half said they have been exposed to physical assault 11 or more times.

Silas hopes to see both provincial and federal levels of government work to address these concerns, and called for the establishm­ent of safe staffing legislatio­n such as a nurse-patient ratio.

“The health-care system needs to deal with the short-staffing. This is becoming ridiculous,” she said.

 ??  ?? Andrea Stelnicki
Andrea Stelnicki

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