nearly one in five physicians reported symptoms of ptsd during the covid-19 pandemic, and women were twice as likely as men to be affected, according to a newly published
study
by ottawa researchers.
the research, the largest of its kind, was based on a systematic review of 57 studies from around the world involving slightly less than 28,000 participants. it was published in the journal jama network open.
lead researcher dr. manish sood, a physician and senior scientist at the ottawa hospital research institute with a research chair in physician health and wellness, said the findings surprised researchers.
the study found that about 18 per cent of physicians reported symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder between december 2019 and november 2022. the rate of reported ptsd was higher than before the pandemic and higher than in the general population.
“it was higher than any of us anticipated. sometimes in research, when you see numbers that are high, you double-, triple- and quadruple-check. we checked and checked and this is what it is,” sood said.
the findings, he said, constitute a call for action to do more to address physician mental health.
“it is giving you a signal, like a canary in the coal mine, that something is wrong. you can’t ignore something like this.”