The AMA was vocal at a recent medical profession symposium to combat bullying, reinforcing zero-tolerance and advocating all states and territories legislate to make hospital boards responsible for the psychosocial wellbeing of their staff.
AMA Vice President Dr Chris Moy, Chair of the AMA Council of Doctors in Training (AMACDT), Dr Hash Abdeen, Dr Jessica Dean, and Dr Hannah Szewczyk, Deputy Co-Chair, AMACDT, made strong presentations to the symposium.
The AMA is advocating for the South Australian model of legislating to be adopted in each state and territory which would make hospital boards directly and explicitly responsible for the psychosocial wellbeing of their staff.
The Medical Board of Australia’s Culture of Medicine Symposium was convened following high occurrences of bullying and harassment reported in its latest Medical Training Survey. The survey one in three Doctors in Training experienced or witnessed bullying, harassment or discrimination, and seven out of 10 of those said their medical training was adversely affected as a result.
The AMACDT is also advocating for staff wellbeing to be included in the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Safety and Quality Health Service Standards with the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care. This recognises that poor workplace culture impacts negatively on patient safety and is an integral component of accreditation.
Dr Abdeen said trainee doctors are disproportionately affected by bullying and harassment because they are under the supervision of senior practitioners for years at a time in their training.
He said reminding doctors their patients can also be impacted by these behaviours can be effective.
“We are seeing more data and more evidence showing health outcomes for patients are diminished when practitioners work in an environment which does not support speaking up for safety. Cultural change is really what’s needed here but role modelling from senior leaders is key,” Dr Abdeen said.
The AMA has recently updated its It reaffirms our zero-tolerance approach to all forms of bullying, harassment and discrimination which also makes recommendations to provide for and promote the physical and psychosocial health, safety, and wellbeing of medical professionals in the workplace.