Thursday, 12 March 2015
Stress in the NHS is costing us all money!
Staff in the NHS are stressed, exhausted and burnt out according to an article written by journalist, editor and lecturer Emma Wilkinson which was published in The Lancet on March 7th, 2015. This is nothing new - almost everyone who I know who works in the NHS tells me that they are stressed; the NHS it isn't what it used to be; there's too much work with too little time to do it; patient expectations are higher and they are more demanding; managers control the services which are offered without really understanding what is involved; standards of care are dropping etc etc. And what's more, they all tell me they would leave if they could but they have bills to pay and they would be letting their work colleagues down if they did leave. However, they tell me this in private; as the article says - few are willing to admit their fears publicly in case they 'will lose their job or are deemed incompetent'.
Ms Wilkinson says there is a culture of fear in the NHS as a result of constant rounds of reorganisation, insufficient funding and negative reporting in the press which has lead to managers bullying their staff rather than caring for them. Resources which the NHS have put in place to help stressed or anxious staff are 'closing or being down-graded' even though they are oversubscribed. On the whole, people go into medicine or clinical professions because they want to help people get better and, as Dr Mark Porter says in the article, they would rather take extra work on themselves than not treat their patients.
Staff who are suffering excess stress and anxiety cannot function and have to take time off. The NHS bill for private 'agency' staff is higher than ever (£2.5bn according to The Daily Mail, March 12th 2015, up fom 303m in 1997) yet little seems to be done across the board about the situation. Private providers who have the expertise to teach staff anti-stress techniques, who can help to change the culture and the way in which management, staff and patients interact, who can identify where stress-points are and offer suggestions for minimising them are seen as alien because they aren't part of the NHS.
And that seems to be the problem. The NHS is so insular that it finds it difficult to see or admit its own failings in a positive light, It trains people to work as 'wellness' interventionists but concentrates on diet (rather than nutrition), stopping smoking (rather than making positive lifestyle choices) and exercise (rather than increasing calorie expenditure and muscle tone by incorporating it into daily activities).
Constant stress can cause weight gain; high blood pressure; heart attacks; type 2 diabetes; strokes and more. Our bodies are not meant to be in a constant state of stress yet the NHS is actually causing the people who work for it to become unwell. It's great that some of its overweight staff have been sent on 'slimming' courses but losing weight in itself does not affect stress levels. NHS staff need to be sent on Resilience-building courses which include nutrition, exercise, lifestyle and, most importantly, relaxation/meditation techniques. And the NHS needs to look at its culture to turn it into the caring organisation it purports to be.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(15)60470-6/fulltext
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