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Workplace stress and its associated outcomes: ethical responsibilities of healthcare organisations.

Created on 14 Jul 2026

Authors

Muhammad Faisal Khan, Fatima Yasin, Faisal Shamim

Published in

JPMA. The Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association. Volume 76. Issue 7. Pages 1140-1145.

Abstract

Workplace stress has a substantial impact on healthcare professionals' job performance, wellbeing and patient care. Long working hours, heavy patient loads, emergency obligations, and professional dangers contribute to chronic stress, which causes burnout, anxiety and depression. Poor leadership and toxic work environments exacerbate these issues. Implementing stress management techniques, such as workload optimisation, mental health assistance, and flexible scheduling, is necessary for ethical healthcare organisations to address these problems. In Pakistan, systemic inefficiencies, labour shortages, and poor infrastructure exacerbate workplace stress, necessitating immediate policy adjustments. A literature review was conducted across Google Scholar, PubMed, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online and Scopus databases without language or temporal restrictions. Studies examining occupational stress, burnout or psychological wellbeing among healthcare workers were included if published in peer-reviewed journals. Authoritative health organisation reports were also included. Data was thematically analysed to identify stress-related factors, organisational responses, and ethical considerations in healthcare settings. Studies focusing on non-healthcare sectors, or lacking direct relevance to occupational stress were excluded. Adopting the World Health Organisation's workplace wellbeing paradigm could enhance healthcare infrastructure, and encouraging ethical leadership can help reduce stress and increase job satisfaction. In order to improve patient outcomes and overall healthcare efficiency, addressing workplace stress through organisational and policy initiatives will help create a healthier and more resilient healthcare mechanism.

PMID:
42444227
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 14 Jul 2026.

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