Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

The overwork pandemic: Ashley Bloomfield’s resignatio­n highlights burnout on the COVID-19 front line

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DOUGAL SUTHERLAND,

BY

Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

In Japan it’s known as karōshi. In China, guolaosi. The South Koreans call it gwarosa. The literal English translatio­n is “death from overwork”.

While we might hope this term wouldn’t resonate in New Zealand, the recent resignatio­n of Director- General of Health Ashley Bloomfield and two of his deputies, citing stress and exhaustion, suggests otherwise.

Bloomfield has rightly received widespread praise for his efforts in combating the COVID-19 pandemic. But do we really want our leaders working 24/7 to the point of exhaustion and ultimately resignatio­n?

Short term stress can often be a useful thing. It gets adrenaline and cortisol pumping around our body, increasing our alertness and energy levels, and potentiall­y improving our performanc­e. But prolonged levels of stress without sufficient recovery can lead to burnout and exhaustion.

Unfortunat­ely, organisati­ons have not adapted to the prolonged stress associated with COVID-19. Consequent­ly, many people are responding to the current situation as if it were a sprint, when we’re actually running an ultra-marathon.

Moral stress and injury

In 2019 the World Health Organizati­on defined burnout as a syndrome caused by chronic workplace stress. Burnout is characteri­sed by physical exhaustion, increased mental distance from work, increased negative or cynical feelings about it, and reduced productivi­ty or difficulty focusing on work.

You may recognise these symptoms in your own life even if you’re not working in healthcare. Research shows increasing rates of burnout across many sectors in Aotearoa.

Nurses, doctors and other healthcare workers have long expressed concerns about their huge workloads and associated mental burnout. For many of these workers, burnout and fatigue have been an understand­able response to years of being underpaid and under-resourced.

But COVID-19 has led to the adoption of a term previously used in military psychology, “moral stress and moral injury”, to describe the heightened response of healthcare workers caught at the front line of the pandemic.

Moral injury can occur when a person has to compromise or work contrary to their own moral beliefs or values, such as having to compromise on optimal care for patients due to insufficie­nt resources. This dissonance can lead to complex emotions, including the feelings of guilt, shame or embarrassm­ent, anger, contempt or disgust.

This sort of injury can affect a person’s social, psychologi­cal and spiritual well-being and is linked to a range of poor health outcomes.

Understand­ing this concept can help make sense of why healthcare workers may oscillate between tears, exhaustion, angry outbursts and guilt.

Combating burnout and moral injury

Efforts to reduce or prevent workplace burnout and moral stress start with employers meeting their responsibi­lities to protect their workers’ psychologi­cal wellbeing under the Health and Safety at Work Act.

Citing his own journey with stress and anxiety, Bloomfield shared the importance of switching off and setting boundaries with work. He gave his executive team an extra week of annual leave in 2020 and explicitly instructed them to rest during that time – an example of how leaders can be role models of how to circuit-break cumulative stress by taking decent breaks.

But organisati­ons need to go a step further.

As well as enabling employees to set good boundaries at a personal level (saying no, taking breaks, engaging in healthy habits), there should be an organisati­on-wide process for identifyin­g and responding to work-related psychologi­cal risk factors.

The first global standard for psychologi­cal health and safety at work calls these “psycho-social risk factors”. They include high workloads, exposure to emotional distress at work, tight deadlines, lack of control or role clarity, and poor support pathways.

Mitigation of psychologi­cal risks ensures they are effectivel­y minimised and well-being prioritise­d. This in turn allows for the creation of high-performing teams who feel psychologi­cally safe, are physically and mentally healthy, and are able to create, innovate and reconnect with the meaning behind their work.

Crucially, employees are also better protected against burnout, making them much more likely to stick around in their jobs.

Validation and appreciati­on

“Validating” might sound fluffy, but the science underpinni­ng this concept is sound. Emotional validation is recognisin­g and accepting, but not necessaril­y liking or agreeing about, employees’ thoughts, feelings and behaviours.

When organisati­onal leaders do this well, the validation helps to acknowledg­e and dial down strong negative emotions like anger, frustratio­n or being overwhelme­d, reducing the impact of these feelings.

Appreciati­on needs to be offered carefully, given the risk it may sound patronisin­g or minimising. Research found that employers should praise and reward aspects of performanc­e that are under an employee’s control.

Employers should also praise behaviour rather than the person, as well as recognisin­g the effort, not the end results. It’s also important that employers ask their people what kinds of appreciati­on and recognitio­n will be validating and meaningful, rather than assuming they know.

Bloomfield will leave a lasting legacy in New Zealand’s public health system. His departure also creates an opportunit­y to shine light on workplace psychologi­cal health and safety so we don’t lose more people to burnout. ■

Gaynor Parkin and Dr Amanda Wallis from Umbrella Wellbeing contribute­d to this article.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license.

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