Ambulance staff took almost a quarter of a million mental health sick days last year as stressed crews are “stretched to breaking point”, new figures show.
Chronic staff shortages have put paramedics, technicians and call handlers under huge pressure – with ambulance waiting times hitting their worst level on record during winter and morale sinking to new lows.
Now, figures obtained under freedom of information laws show that in 2022, 1 in 16 of England’s NHS ambulance workers took time off due to conditions such as anxiety, stress and depression – the equivalent of 1,100 staff.
NHS bosses and unions say deteriorating working conditions caused by staff shortages are driving the absences, which have increased by a third since 2020 from 188,134 to 247,711 lost days.
At some trusts, nearly a third of staff have taken at least one day off sick citing mental health, while the number on long-term sick leave for psychiatric reasons has increased by 38 per cent in just two years.
“Increased demand, reduced resources, and queuing at emergency departments” has put workers under huge stress, Jo Mildenhall, paramedic psychological health manager at the College of Paramedics, said – warning that the problem could get worse without changes.
“Mental ill-health including burnout, stress, psychological trauma and moral injury is a rising and significant issue, and without further investment into addressing the causative factors and providing additional interventions and supports, we are likely to see the issue increase further,” she said.
A total of 6,029 of the 17,447 workers in England took time off for mental health reasons across the country’s nine ambulance trusts in 2022 – up from 5,126 in 2020 and 5,958 in 2021. Some 1,243 staff were on long-term sick leave due to mental ill health last year, an increase from 904 in 2020.
The situation is particularly bad at the South Central ambulance trust, which covers Hampshire, Berkshire, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire, where 32 per cent of staff took at least one day off due to mental ill health last year.
The next most affected trust was in the East of England, with 30 per cent of staff absent. In London, the figure was 17 per cent, while it sat at 12 per cent in Yorkshire, 14 per cent in the West Midlands, and 18 per cent in the South West.
“The government’s failure to fund services has left too few staff and ambulances. Excessively long shifts without proper breaks and lengthy queueing outside hospitals are having a negative impact on wellbeing,” said Sara Gorton, head of health at trade union Unison.
“Increasingly, crews are having to deal with patients dying before they can reach them. Demand is so high that paramedics have no time between incidents, causing high levels of stress.
“Staff shouldn’t be left with damaged mental health for doing their jobs. Ministers must act now to address capacity issues that are triggering burnout.”
Liberal Democrat health spokesperson Daisy Cooper, whose party submitted the FOI requests, said the government urgently needed to improve conditions for crews who “dedicate their lives to saving others”.
“The Conservative government has been letting them down and taking them for granted for far too long. Their poor treatment leads to staff shortages, adding misery to patients waiting for an ambulance.”
One experienced call handler for an ambulance trust in the north of England was signed off sick for two months after staff shortages and mounting abuse from frustrated 999 callers took their toll.
“We were down to minimum staff, the calls were stacking, it got to 6am in the morning and I couldn’t take any more. I’d spent the night and my breaks walking around the car park just crying,” she told The Independent.
A demand surge meant her team was unable to process even the most critical calls in time despite working flat-out.
“There were people in the queue actively dying – we couldn’t get to them. And it began to feel like it was my fault. It wasn’t my fault and I know that now because I’ve had counselling, but at that time, and how many times I’d been shouted at, screamed at, sworn at, threatened, but I still had to keep sitting there and doing it over and over again.” Read More
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