Edmonton Journal

Mental health leading cause of disability leave at AHS

Ongoing turmoil in organizati­on at least partly to blame, says Swann

- KEITH GEREIN kgerein@postmedia.com twitter.com/ keithgerei­n

Mental health issues comprise the most common reason why staff at Alberta Health Services go on longterm disability, a newly released document shows.

The AHS data, obtained by the Alberta Liberals through an access to informatio­n request, lists the top five reasons why various types of health workers are forced to go on disability from work.

Mental health was cited as the top cause for registered nurses and members of the Health Sciences Associatio­n of Alberta, which represents a variety of workers from paramedics and pharmacy technician­s to occupation­al therapists and social workers.

Musculoske­letal problems, such as a back injury that might result from lifting a patient, was the second most common reason.

As for members of Alberta Union of Provincial Employees, whose members include licensed practical nurses, custodians and other support staff, the top two causes were reversed. Musculoske­letal injuries ranked first followed by mental illness.

Cancer, accidents and nervous system issues were also listed in the top five for all categories of workers.

Interim Liberal leader David Swann said the prevalence of mental illness as the leading reason why people take disability leave is partly due to the high-stress nature of health care, but can also be linked to ongoing turmoil at AHS. He noted recent years have seen at least a couple of internal reorganiza­tions, the firing and resurrecti­on of an AHS board and a high turnover of top executives.

“The rank and file don’t know where they are getting their direction, don’t know what power they have to make decisions, and there is ongoing ambiguity over who is in charge,” he said. “Everyone gets frustrated because decisions take a long time, or inappropri­ate decisions get made. It increases stress and conflict in the system.”

Elisabeth Ballermann, president of the Health Sciences Associatio­n of Alberta, said her organizati­on has noticed an uptick in staff leaving work because of mental health problems, including post-traumatic stress disorder.

Acting AHS president Verna Yiu said the health authority believes anxiety, depression and other mental illness common among health workers can be linked to the stresses of caring for sick and injured people.

“We are quite concerned about that … and so we have been putting a lot of effort around our people support program.”

Health Minister Sarah Hoffman said she has asked AHS for more informatio­n on long-term disability and sick leave trends.

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