4.3 Article

Mental Illness and Work-Related Limitations in Healthcare Workers: A Preliminary Retrospective Study

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19159098

Keywords

clinimetrics; fit note; job limitation; occupational medicine; psychiatric diagnosis

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This study investigated hospital staff requests for job fitness visits and analyzed the characteristics and associations of these requests. The study found that most participants had at least one psychiatric diagnosis, with significant differences based on gender and fit notes. Age and work-related characteristics did not show significant associations. The study also highlighted the limitations of the current occupational medicine procedure in considering clinical factors for specific assignments.
This retrospective observational study investigated hospital staff requests for job fitness visits, addressed to occupational medicine. Specific objectives were to analyze: (1) health workers' requests, sociodemographic characteristics, psychiatric diagnoses, assigned doctor's fit notes, and (orthopedic, psychiatric) limitations; (2) associations between psychiatric diagnoses, sociodemographic (sex, age), and work-related (job, department) characteristics; (3) associations between the same psychiatric diagnoses/orthopedic limitations, fit notes, and/or psychiatric limitations. Data of St. Orsola-Malpighi Polyclinic health workers (N = 149; F = 73.8%; mean age = 48 +/- 9.6 years), visited by both the occupational medicine physician and psychiatrist (January 2016-May 2019), were analyzed. 83.2% of the sample presented with at least one psychiatric diagnosis, including mood (47%), anxiety (13.4%), and anxious-depressive (10.7%) disorders. Significant differences between psychiatric diagnoses according to sex and fit notes (both p < 0.01) have been found, whereas no significant associations based on age and work-related characteristics have been observed. Analysis of frequencies of participants with the same psychiatric diagnosis (orthopedic limitation being equal), according to doctor's fit notes and psychiatric work limitations, showed a high heterogeneity of assignments. The current occupational medicine procedure for fit notes/job limitations assignments does not allow taking into consideration clinical factors possibly associated with more specific assignments. To standardize the procedure and translate the psychiatrist's clinical judgment into practice, further studies to test the usefulness of clinimetrics, which might represent a reliable approach in considering different fit notes and job limitations, are needed.

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