The Government has made a pledge to revamp the current support mechanisms for NHS staff, such as nurses who experience mental health problems as a result of work pressures. This pledge follows the publication of a report by Health Education England (HEE) (2019) on the mental health and wellbeing of NHS staff and learners, which was commissioned last year. Plans to give staff immediate access to dedicated mental health support will be considered as part of the upcoming workforce implementation plan.
Background
Many nurses and other health professionals work in emotionally challenging situations, providing optimum care to service users day to day. It is interesting to note that the founder of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale, may well have experienced significant emotional trauma during her historic quest to provide nursing care for the sick and wounded during the Crimean War in the mid-19th century. When she returned to England, she was said to have been aged by illness and exhaustion, and suffered long-term depression that only began to abate in her older years (Mackowiak and Batten, 2008).
In contemporary health care it is vital that staff are supported and that employers have the right procedures in place to offer them help when they need it.
The Government is now committed to ensuring that processes are in place to meet the mental health support needs of NHS staff, with recognition that more support is needed for those delivering care and for those studying to become healthcare staff such as nursing students. The main aim of this new initiative is to create an NHS in which staff and learners are content in the work they do, enjoy fulfilling careers and are proud of the care that they provide to their patients.
Many staff in the NHS are exposed to and witness scenes of extreme emotional distress, for example, working with seriously ill children, some of whom may die, and then subsequently being involved in helping the family in their bereavement.
Nurses on the NHS frontline in all clinical environments witness such scenes almost daily. However, the resilience necessary to manage the aftermath of such tragic events is not something that nurses learn during training. The abilities of nurses to cope with such emotional encounters should not be taken for granted and many health professionals need support to prevent them from reacting in ways that are damaging to their own health.
According to Kowalski et al (2010), 15–45% of nurses in hospitals in western countries suffer from burnout. This can lead to emotional exhaustion, depression and a reduction in workplace performance. Preventing this in the nursing workforce is challenging for healthcare managers, not only because burnout can reduce staff retention but also because it can be the cause of preventable serious incidents at work (Kowalski et al, 2010).
It is concerning that nurses' ability to cope in all situations is often taken for granted by the NHS. Given the size of the NHS workforce—it is one of the largest in the world with 1.4 million employees, many of whom work on the frontline of care delivery—it is imperative that the health service should set a precedent when it comes to supporting staff when they need it.
The experiences of healthcare staff in delivering care is critical to their own and their patients' wellbeing, as well as to the overall culture of the workplace (de Zulueta, 2015). The NHS Long Term Plan (NHS England and NHS Improvement, 2019) aims to build a health service that seeks to strive to promote the same values for its staff as they seek to uphold and achieve for their patients.
Key recommendations
The HEE (2019) report on the mental health and wellbeing of NHS staff and learners, which was commissioned by the Department of Health and Social Care, makes a number of recommendations. During the course of the commission's investigation a number of themes emerged, including:
For many years the NHS has endeavoured to replicate the success of hospitals in the Magnet® Recognition Programme, which aim to create supportive professional nursing care environments. In a study conducted by Kelly et al (2016), Magnet hospitals were shown to have significantly better work environments than non-Magnet hospitals and their nurses were 18% less likely to be dissatisfied with their jobs. In context, the better work environments in Magnet hospitals were associated with lower levels of nurse job dissatisfaction and burnout.
Commission recommendations
The Government has made a commitment to implement many of the recommendations of the NHS Staff and Learners' Mental Wellbeing Commission. The 33 recommendations include:
Conclusion
Healing care environments and buildings are not just for patients and service users, but also for staff such as nurses who work within them. The care that patients receive is only ever as good as the nurse who delivers it and, if the NHS fails to care for the carers, then the whole edifice of the health service could start to crumble.
My own colleague Michael Clift, to whom I dedicate this policy review, sadly took his own life in 2018 after suffering chronic depression for many years. Michael was an esteemed and valued children's nurse who worked at London's Royal Free Hospital as the lead for clinical practice education in nursing across children's services. He was especially interested in providing optimum care for young people with mental health problems. Pertinent to Michael's and many other needless deaths of nursing colleagues is the question: who cares for the people who deliver care 24/7 to the citizens of this country?