BMJ 2004;329:658-659 (18 September), doi:10.1136/bmj.38133.502569.AE (published 15 July 2004)
Paper
Bullying among doctors in training: cross sectional questionnaire survey
Elisabeth Paice, dean director1,
Maryanne Aitken, project manager1,
Anita Houghton, associate dean1,
Jenny Firth-Cozens, special adviser1
1 London Deanery, London WC1N 1DZ
Correspondence to: E Paice epaice{at}londondeanery.ac.uk
Introduction
Workplace bullying is associated with stress, depression, and
intention to leave. It is an important issue for the health
service because of its potential impact on staff health, retention,
and patient care.
1
2 In a recent survey of UK doctors in training,
37% said they had been bullied during the past year.
3 To understand
the problem better, we investigated how commonly doctors in
training experienced persistent and serious bullying, who were
the sources of this behaviour, and what action was taken to
deal with it.
Participants, methods, and results
We conducted a cross sectional questionnaire survey of doctors
in training in London north of the Thames, using electronic
survey units followed up by postal questionnaire, as described
previously.
4 Our sample was defined as all trainees available
at the time of the survey in participating trusts. The survey
included four questions on bullying. The stem question, derived
from one used by Hicks,
2 was: "In this post, have you been subjected
to persistent behaviour by others which has eroded your professional
confidence or self esteem?" The analysis of differences between
group frequencies was calculated using the
2 test with adjusted
residuals.
All 21 hospital trusts and six of the seven community and mental health trusts took part. The response rate overall was 72% (2730/3779), with rates for individual trusts ranging from 40% to 98%. The stem question was answered by 2673/2730 (98%) of respondents, three of whom did not record their sex and five of whom did not record their grade. These included 357 (13%) preregistration house officers, 1124 (42%) senior house officers, and 1188 (44%) specialist registrars. This distribution over-represents pre-registration house officers, who make up 10% of the trainee population. Respondents included 1429 (53%) men and 2090 (78%) UK graduates.
"Yes" responses to the stem question were given by 484 (18%) respondents, ranging from 6% to 38% in different trusts, unrelated to type of trust. A yes response was more likely the more junior the grade (table). The table also shows analysis of who the main source of this behaviour was and whether the respondent had complained (and if not, why not). Only 153 (32%) respondents had complained, with no significant difference between the grades, but we found highly significant differences between the training grades in the source of the behaviour and in the reasons for not complaining. Consultants were the source in 130 (27%) cases, including 43 (54%) of the 80 respondents who were afraid of the consequences of complaining. Yes responses to the stem question were more common in women than men (21% (262/1241) v 16% (222/1429)), significantly so among senior house officers, but the pattern was the same. Yes responses were more common among non-UK respondents (21% (120/580) v 17% (364/2090)), significantly so among specialist registrars.
Comment
We found the prevalence of bullying to be lower than previously
reported, but the question we used was framed to include only
behaviours that were persistent, had a negative effect on respondents,
and had occurred in the current post. London has a higher concentration
of teaching hospital trusts than other areas of the country,
but as we found no correlation between type of trust and the
prevalence of bullying, these results are likely to be representative.
Most of the negative behaviours were perpetrated by other doctors,
in a pecking order of seniority, although nurses and midwives
were an important source for junior grades. For bullying to
be tackled, trainees need a safe means of complaining. They
also need to be made aware of the impact that their own behaviour
may have on colleagues. It should be recognised that some of
the behaviours that erode trainees' professional confidence
or self esteem may be attempts by trainers to improve their
performance.
5 An educational rather than a punitive approach
is needed to help trainers develop effective ways of encouraging
better performance without becoming a source of distress to
junior colleagues.
Five tables of further data about the respondents and their responses are on bmj.com
This article was posted on bmj.com on 15 July 2004: http://bmj.com/cgi/doi/10.1136/bmj.38133.502569.AE
We thank Ray Flux of CivilEyes, who conducted the survey.
Contributors: EP planned the study, analysed the results, and drafted the paper; she is also the guarantor. MA managed the survey and collected the results. AH and JF-C commented on the plans and helped with the final draft.
Funding: No external funding.
Competing interests: The London Deanery is reponsible for quality assurance of training in the area concerned.
Ethical approval: Not required.
References
- Firth-Cozens J. Interventions to improve physicians' well-being and patient care. Soc Sci Med
2001; 215-22.
- Hicks B. Time to stop bullying and intimidation. Hospital Medicine
2000;61: 428-31.[Web of Science][Medline]
- Quine L. Workplace bullying in junior doctors: questionnaire survey. BMJ
2002;324: 878-9.[Free Full Text]
- Paice E, Aitken M, Cowan G, Heard S. Trainee satisfaction before and after the Calman reforms of specialist training: questionnaire survey. BMJ
2000;320: 832-6.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Paice E, Firth-Cozens J. Who's a bully then? BMJ 2003;326(suppl):S127. http://careerfocus.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/326/7393/S127

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