Page 21 - LRCC May 2022 Focus
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One of the most prevalent themes of the COVID-19 pandemic has been the
                                        alarming growth in mental health challenges faced in the workplace. Remote
                                        work has resulted in worker isolation and loss of connectedness and has been a
                                        significant driver of emotional and mental health issues. Health care workers, who
                                        have remained at the bedside, have also faced significantly ill patients and dealt
                                        with families not being able to visit. An increase in death and dying issues has led
                                        to a rise in stress, anxiety, burnout, and depression.

                                        Lyra Health’s 2022 State of Workforce Mental Health reports that employees’
                                        mental health is low. Thirty-one percent of employees surveyed reported their
                                        mental health had declined in the past year, increasing 24 percent over pre-
                                        pandemic levels. Eighty-four percent of workers said they experienced at least one
                                        mental health challenge in the past year. The World Health Association reported
                                        that anxiety and depression had increased 25 percent. According to the Centers
                                        for Disease Control (CDC), four in 10 adults have reported symptoms of anxiety
                                        and depressive disorders, up from one in 10 adults before the pandemic. Sleep
                                        disorders and substance abuse issues have increased among adults. Fifty-one
                                        percent of adults say they have had worry or stress-related problems since the
                                        pandemic and those challenges have damaged their overall health.

                                        “Since the pandemic and quarantine, a sense of loneliness, anxiety, fear of the
                                        unknown, and isolation have increased anxiety and depression,” said Linda
                                        Peterson, M.D., chief medical officer at McLaren Greater Lansing (MGL). “This has
                                        led to increased self-medication with alcohol, tobacco, and drugs. It is a vicious
                                        cycle that has led to increased suicide rates across the country.”

                                        Ingham County Health Officer Linda Vail said that before COVID, public health
                                        officials were working on the opioid epidemic. Just when it seemed that some
                                        inroads were being made in the battle, COVID sent things in the other direction.

                                        “We had really been working on that and numbers were plateauing, and then they
                                        started shooting back up again,” said Vail. “We are seeing many people struggle
                                        with getting into and staying in recovery, likely due to the loss of connections that
                                        have been disrupted during the pandemic.”

                                        Vail said the longer-term impact of mental health challenges will include figuring
                             Tima Miroshnichenko/Pexels  “The pandemic thrust us into this use of technology far beyond what we have
                                        out how to adjust to the shift to virtual communications, which affects how we
                                        conduct meetings, conferences, and daily work.


                                        ever done before – pushing us into a new social shift in terms of how society is
                                        organized,” said Vail.


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