Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on sickness absence for mental ill health in National Health Service staff
Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on sickness absence for mental ill health in National Health Service staff
Objective To explore the patterns of sickness absence in National Health Service (NHS) staff attributable to mental ill health during the first wave of the COVID-19 epidemic in March–July 2020.
Design Case-referent analysis of a secondary dataset.
Setting NHS Trusts in England.
Participants Pseudonymised data on 959 356 employees who were continuously employed by NHS trusts during 1 January 2019 to 31 July 2020.
Main outcome measures Trends in the burden of sickness absence due to mental ill health from 2019 to 2020 according to demographic, regional and occupational characteristics.
Results Over the study period, 164 202 new sickness absence episodes for mental ill health were recorded in 12.5% (119 525) of the study sample. There was a spike of sickness absence for mental ill health in March–April 2020 (899 730 days lost) compared with 519 807 days in March–April 2019; the surge was driven by an increase in new episodes of long-term absence and had diminished by May/June 2020. The increase was greatest in those aged >60 years (227%) and among employees of Asian and Black ethnic origin (109%–136%). Among doctors and dentists, the number of days absent declined by 12.7%. The biggest increase was in London (122%) and the smallest in the East Midlands (43.7%); the variation between regions reflected the rates of COVID-19 sickness absence during the same period.
Conclusion Although the COVID-19 epidemic led to an increase in sickness absence attributed to mental ill health in NHS staff, this had substantially declined by May/June 2020, corresponding with the decrease in pressures at work as the first wave of the epidemic subsided.
van der Plaat, Diana A.
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Edge, Rhiannon
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Coggon, David
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van Tongeren, Martie
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Muiry, Rupert
ed06e39c-aca5-47c6-983e-2104c0eafefd
Parsons, Vaughan
5599eaba-c97b-4c50-97b3-d32969d44124
Cullinan, Paul
b5b2eb0a-9fb9-4d4b-af18-5109de92d742
Madan, Ira
c6fd0de4-6d73-47eb-9e97-79a2941c8767
3 November 2021
van der Plaat, Diana A.
ae7fbb1a-a36d-4e1f-9072-85950605ec98
Edge, Rhiannon
46b613a8-e035-43c2-8342-70af98701608
Coggon, David
2b43ce0a-cc61-4d86-b15d-794208ffa5d3
van Tongeren, Martie
867598b9-e698-490c-8df2-19dd657c1779
Muiry, Rupert
ed06e39c-aca5-47c6-983e-2104c0eafefd
Parsons, Vaughan
5599eaba-c97b-4c50-97b3-d32969d44124
Cullinan, Paul
b5b2eb0a-9fb9-4d4b-af18-5109de92d742
Madan, Ira
c6fd0de4-6d73-47eb-9e97-79a2941c8767
van der Plaat, Diana A., Edge, Rhiannon, Coggon, David, van Tongeren, Martie, Muiry, Rupert, Parsons, Vaughan, Cullinan, Paul and Madan, Ira
(2021)
Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on sickness absence for mental ill health in National Health Service staff.
BMJ Open, 11, [e054533].
Abstract
Objective To explore the patterns of sickness absence in National Health Service (NHS) staff attributable to mental ill health during the first wave of the COVID-19 epidemic in March–July 2020.
Design Case-referent analysis of a secondary dataset.
Setting NHS Trusts in England.
Participants Pseudonymised data on 959 356 employees who were continuously employed by NHS trusts during 1 January 2019 to 31 July 2020.
Main outcome measures Trends in the burden of sickness absence due to mental ill health from 2019 to 2020 according to demographic, regional and occupational characteristics.
Results Over the study period, 164 202 new sickness absence episodes for mental ill health were recorded in 12.5% (119 525) of the study sample. There was a spike of sickness absence for mental ill health in March–April 2020 (899 730 days lost) compared with 519 807 days in March–April 2019; the surge was driven by an increase in new episodes of long-term absence and had diminished by May/June 2020. The increase was greatest in those aged >60 years (227%) and among employees of Asian and Black ethnic origin (109%–136%). Among doctors and dentists, the number of days absent declined by 12.7%. The biggest increase was in London (122%) and the smallest in the East Midlands (43.7%); the variation between regions reflected the rates of COVID-19 sickness absence during the same period.
Conclusion Although the COVID-19 epidemic led to an increase in sickness absence attributed to mental ill health in NHS staff, this had substantially declined by May/June 2020, corresponding with the decrease in pressures at work as the first wave of the epidemic subsided.
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 September 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 November 2021
Published date: 3 November 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 455177
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455177
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 5c042ecb-4ac3-4fd7-aabc-780579ce53ae
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Date deposited: 14 Mar 2022 17:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:43
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Contributors
Author:
Diana A. van der Plaat
Author:
Rhiannon Edge
Author:
David Coggon
Author:
Martie van Tongeren
Author:
Rupert Muiry
Author:
Vaughan Parsons
Author:
Paul Cullinan
Author:
Ira Madan
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