Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jun 2023)

The association between workload, alcohol use, and alcohol misuse among psychiatrists in China

  • Wenzheng Li,
  • Wenzheng Li,
  • Wenzheng Li,
  • Wenzheng Li,
  • Long Chen,
  • Long Chen,
  • Long Chen,
  • Long Chen,
  • Michael Hsu,
  • Daming Mo,
  • Daming Mo,
  • Daming Mo,
  • Lei Xia,
  • Lei Xia,
  • Lei Xia,
  • Kaiyuan Min,
  • Feng Jiang,
  • Feng Jiang,
  • Tingfang Liu,
  • Yuanli Liu,
  • Huanzhong Liu,
  • Huanzhong Liu,
  • Huanzhong Liu,
  • Yi-lang Tang,
  • Yi-lang Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1171316
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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AimSurvey alcohol use and workload among Chinese psychiatrists and explore their associations.MethodsWe conducted an online questionnaire among psychiatrists working in large psychiatric institutions across the country. We collected data including demographic factors, alcohol use, and workload. Alcohol use was assessed using the Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C), and workload-related questions included working hours, night shifts, and caseloads.ResultsIn total, 3,549 psychiatrists completed the survey. Nearly half (47.6%) reported alcohol use, and the percentage of alcohol use in males (74.1%) was significantly higher than in females. 8.1% exceeded the AUDIT-C cutoff scores for probable alcohol misuse (19.6%in males and 2.6%in females). AUDIT-C scores were significantly correlated with working hours per week (p = 0.017) and the number of outpatient visits per week (p = 0.006). Regressional analysis showed that alcohol use was significantly associated with the following factors: longer working hours (Working more than 44 h/week, OR = 1.315), having an administrative position (OR = 1.352), being male (OR = 6.856), being single (OR = 1.601), being divorced or widowed (OR = 1.888), smoking (OR = 2.219), working in the West (OR = 1.511) or the Northeast (OR = 2.440). Regressional analysis showed that alcohol misuse was significantly associated with the following factors: fewer night shifts (Three to four night shifts/month, OR = 1.460; No more than 2 night shifts/month, OR = 1.864), being male (OR = 4.007), working in the Northeast (OR = 1.683), smoking (OR = 2.219), frequent insomnia (OR = 1.678).ConclusionNearly half of the psychiatrists in China reported alcohol use and 8.1% had probable AUD. Alcohol consumption is significantly associated with several workload-related factors, such as long working hours, heavy caseload, and administrative duties. Alcohol misuse was inversely associated with the number of night shifts per month. While the direction of causality is unclear, our findings may help identify vulnerable professional groups and develop more targeted interventions to improve healthcare professionals’ well-being.

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