| Literature DB >> 33483706 |
Victoria Collin1, Ellena O Selmo2, Penny Whitehead2.
Abstract
Introduction Dentists are known to function under stressful conditions. It is important to monitor, examine and understand the psychological effects the unprecedented challenge of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has had.Aims To compare levels of psychological distress in UK dentists, before and during the pandemic, to determine if this was affected.Materials and methods An online survey collected demographic data, levels of psychological distress (GP-CORE) and experiences from UK dentists during the 'national lockdown' period of the pandemic. Statistical and thematic analyses were performed and data compared with previous research.Results Psychological distress was lower in UK dentists during the national lockdown period when compared to previous research using the same measure. GDPs, those in England and those with mixed commitment reported the highest levels of psychological distress. Most dentists had been affected by the pandemic. Some who were remotely working during this time valued the time away from the profession, relishing the absence of regulatory and contractual stressors, and used lockdown as an opportunity to re-evaluate their lives and careers. Others found the conditions stressful with some previously acknowledged stressors remaining and novel stressors introduced.Conclusions We argue that the altered balance of stressors and the resulting reduced psychological distress is further evidence of the need for reform of the profession to improve working lives. Given the importance of mental health and wellbeing, it is vital that monitoring continues.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33483706 PMCID: PMC7821171 DOI: 10.1038/s41415-020-2592-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br Dent J ISSN: 0007-0610 Impact factor: 2.727
Demographic characteristics of respondents
| Characteristic | % | N |
|---|---|---|
| Male | 50.3 | 2,602 |
| Female | 49.0 | 2,534 |
| Prefer not to say | 0.6 | 32 |
| Other | 0 | 2 |
| Under 30 | 9.9 | 510 |
| 30-39 | 24.3 | 1,259 |
| 40-49 | 28.9 | 1,493 |
| 50-59 | 26.9 | 1,392 |
| 60 and over | 9.3 | 483 |
| Prefer not to say | 0.7 | 36 |
| Yes | 93.8 | 4,860 |
| No | 6.2 | 320 |
| England | 85.7 | 4,437 |
| Northern Ireland | 4.3 | 223 |
| Scotland | 6.3 | 324 |
| Wales | 3.8 | 196 |
| 100% (exclusively NHS/HS) | 4.2 | 183 |
| 75-99% (NHS/HS) | 32.7 | 1,431 |
| 50-74% (NHS/HS) | 13.3 | 582 |
| 25-49% (NHS/HS) | 7.4 | 323 |
| 1-24% (NHS/HS) | 20.7 | 908 |
| 0% (exclusively private) | 21.7 | 950 |
| General dental practice | 90.2 | 4,384 |
| Community/public dental services | 3.9 | 188 |
| University dental teaching/research | 0.6 | 27 |
| Hospital practice | 1.7 | 85 |
| Armed Forces | 0.4 | 20 |
| Public health | 0 | 1 |
| Student or trainee | 0.5 | 24 |
| Another field of practice | 2.7 | 132 |
| Practice owner | 47.4 | 2,065 |
| Associate | 50.6 | 2,204 |
| Locum | 0.2 | 7 |
| Foundation dentist/vocational dental practitioner | 1.1 | 48 |
| Another role in general dental practice | 0.7 | 31 |
Fig. 1Dentists' levels of psychological distress during lockdown compared to pre-pandemic levels (2017) by field of practice
Fig. 2General dental practitioners' levels of psychological distress during lockdown and pre-pandemic (2017) by level of NHS commitment
Fig. 3Percentage of practice owners and associates who stated that they had suffered financially or their mental health had suffered
Time away from the profession has been beneficial
| Participant | Quote |
|---|---|
| Male, 60 and over, England, suffered financially | 'Nice weather, less stress, more time for other interests. Apart from limitations of movement, what's not to like?' |
| Female, 30-39, England, currently working as a dentist, associate, 50-74% NHS, suffered financially | 'Loved the break from dentistry' |
| Female, 40-49, England, currently working as a dentist, associate, 75-99% NHS | 'I haven't missed dentistry at all. It has been a break I never thought I'd have from an absolutely awful job' |
| Male, 50-59, Scotland, currently working as a dentist, GDP, 75-99% NHS, suffered financially | 'I think the equation is pretty straightforward. Subtract manic NHS dentistry from life = contentment' |
| Male, 50-59, England, currently working as a dentist, practice owner, 0% NHS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | '[...] whilst I've chosen to enjoy the decent weather and time away from work, I can understand that others may have struggled with this. UK dentistry is in a complete mess and private practices have been thrown under the bus' |
The pandemic has been a stressful time
| Participant | Quote |
|---|---|
| Male, 30-39, Northern Ireland, currently working as a dentist, associate, 1-24% HS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | 'I am completely disillusioned with how the profession is perceived by the government and health authorities [...] the [Redacted leadership] are being swayed by questionable evidence, patients are suffering and the [Redacted leadership] seem to be using it as a game to allow them to restructure the NHS structure. I am on the brink of financial ruin and am seriously considering a change of career. The stress is not worth it' |
| Female, 40-49, England, currently working as a dentist, practice owner, 50-74% NHS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | 'It has made me question my vocation and my long-term stability for myself, my practice, my patients and my staff. This in turn has been superseded with an actual solid scepticism that government are "up to something". I wish we had better communication and transparency for such an important sector' |
| Male, 30-39, England, dental academic | 'Stress of having to redefine practices of teaching, via remote delivery [...] knowing we are likely to be restricted for future teaching [clinically] is frightening for the next generations of young dentists' |
| Female, 50-59, England, practice owner, 50-74% NHS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | 'The anxiety of not being able to help our patients by seeing them is awful. We may lose our business. Being treated like an idiot and not being told what on earth is going on is incredibly difficult when as principals and dentists we are used to problem solving is utterly agonising. The [Redacted leadership] has and is assuming that we aren't capable of helping either [them], the country or our patients and that makes a hard job even worse' |
| Male, 60 and over, England, hospital dentist | 'I am worried each day about patients, they are without doubt coming to harm and many who were destined for surgery will probably not be able to access this in any realistic timescale. This is extremely depressing' |
| Male, 40-49, England, currently working as a dentist, practice owner, 0% NHS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | 'I have become totally indifferent about the future of my career in dentistry. If I had an "out" I would use it now. I feel the whole perception of dentistry in the UK has been irreparably damaged' |
Feeling let down by those leading the profession (UCC = urgent care centre, PPE = personal protective equipment)
| Participant | Quote |
|---|---|
| Male, 40-49, Scotland, currently working as a dentist, practice owner, 75-99% NHS, redeployed to frontline, suffered financially, mental health suffered | 'The government may say "there is no money" - WE ARE THE NHS - there is pots of money' |
| Male, 60 and over, England, currently working as a dentist, associate, 1-24% NHS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | '[...] we are "on our own". I feel let down by the government, our professional leaders and the [name of practice redacted]' |
| Female, 40-49, England, currently working as a dentist, practice owner, 0% NHS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | 'It's all about us competing for the PPE hence we are considered as NON-ESSENTIAL!!' |
| Female, 60 and over, England, community dentist | 'Required us to do work that is not within our normal working patterns and we have poor support from our clinical manager [...] engaging as little as possible at a time when we are all adjusting to such major changes in the way we work and good leadership and management is really needed' |
| Male, 50-59 years, England, currently working as a dentist, practice owner, 1-24% NHS, suffered financially, mental health suffered | 'I feel traumatised that loyal patients are suffering through the idiotic actions of an incompetent [redacted leadership] that couldn't care about the work done by dentists. Hopefully [redacted] will have severe toothache and have a few front teeth extracted at an UCC so they have to face the public looking like a character from |