AJPH Highlights Health Worker Mental Health

Posted February 15, 2024

What to know

Summary: The American Journal of Public Health recently published a special supplement with 15 articles focusing on health worker mental health.
By: Thomas Cunningham, PhD, Senior Scientist, NIOSH Division of Science Integration
AJPH Cover

Summary

The American Journal of Public Health recently published a special supplement with 15 articles focusing on health worker mental health. This special issue of the journal was sponsored and edited by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and stems from the health worker mental health initiative from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and NIOSH. Research indicates health workers experience high levels of physical injury, harassment, stress, and burnout and many health workers intend to leave their positions or the field altogether. Protecting and supporting health worker mental health has important implications for the nation's health system and our public health infrastructure.

Contributions

The work presented in this supplement covers three main areas of interest related to the theme of Addressing the Current Crisis and Building a Sustainable Future:

1) updated data describing concerning trends in the state of health worker mental health and well-being, including elevated levels of burnout,

2) original research and a systematic review describing evidence-informed interventions aimed at improving health worker mental health and well-being, and

3) perspectives from organizations that are taking action to make equitable, systems-level changes at the organizational, state, and national levels.

Examples of the contributions to the supplement include:

Health workers continue to face significant mental health challenges. As stated in the introductory article, Health Worker Mental Health: Addressing the Current Crisis and Building a Sustainable Future, employers, labor organizations, professional associations, government agencies, and other key players are taking action to improve health worker mental health, through training and treatment approaches. However, there is a need for more investment in primary prevention of poor mental health outcomes at the organizational and systems levels. This supplement can serve as a critical resource in supporting organizational change. This is one step in a national response to protect the mental health of health workers. Additional resources are provided below.