Job stress, satisfaction, and mental health among general practitioners before and after introduction of new contract.
- 13 June 1992
- Vol. 304 (6841), 1545-1548
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.304.6841.1545
Abstract
OBJECTIVE--To compare measures of job stress, job satisfaction, and mental health among general practitioners before and after the introduction of the new contract in April 1990. DESIGN--Cross sectional postal questionnaire survey in July 1990. Comparison of results with those obtained in previous survey in November 1987. SETTING--General practice in United Kingdom. SUBJECTS--1500 general practitioners randomly selected from general medical services lists, 917 of whom (61%) returned questionnaires usable for statistical analysis. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Aspects of job causing stress, job satisfaction (Warr, Cook, and Wall scale), and mental health (Crown-Crisp experiential index). RESULTS--Compared with 1987, in 1990 doctors experienced more stress from night calls (mean score 3.83 in 1990 v 3.45 in 1987), emergencies during surgery hours (3.72 v 3.48), and interruption of family life by telephone (3.58 v 2.73; p less than 0.001 for all three variables). Scores for somatic anxiety and depression were higher in both men and women in 1990 (men: somatic anxiety 3.12 v 2.36; depression 3.80 v 2.94; women: somatic anxiety 3.56 v 2.65; depression 4.02 v 3.37; p less than 0.001). Job satisfaction had also decreased in 1990 (5.23 v 4.26; p less than 0.001). CONCLUSIONS--Doctors experienced more stress, less job satisfaction, and poorer mental health in 1990 than in 1987. These changes may have resulted from the introduction of the new contract.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Alcoholic doctors can recover.BMJ, 1990
- BMA rejects NHS review but ...BMJ, 1989
- Quality and the use of time in general practice: widening the discussion.BMJ, 1989
- The new general practitioner contract: is there an alternative?BMJ, 1989
- Mental health, job satisfaction, and job stress among general practitioners.BMJ, 1989
- The "five minute" consultation: effect of time constraint on clinical content and patient satisfaction.BMJ, 1986
- Measurement of Stress as it Affects the Work of the General PractitionerFamily Practice, 1985
- Work Satisfaction of General Practitioners and the Quality of Patient CareFamily Practice, 1985
- Role Conflict and Role Ambiguity: Integration of the Literature and Directions for Future ResearchHuman Relations, 1981
- Job dissatisfaction as a possible risk factor in coronary heart diseaseJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1971