Abstract

Abstract Background Small medical specialties may be more vulnerable to workforce shortage and the COVID-19 pandemic and this may directly impact in the provision of care for chronically-ill patients. This study aims to explore health workforce development and new needs, using rheumatology in Germany as a case study. Methods An explorative multi-methods approach was applied, combining health labour market assessment of rheumatology physicians (public statistics 2000-2019) and a questionnaire-based online survey conducted in early 2021 (n = 101 respondents; rheumatology physicians and residents). Main selected topics: work hours, workload, mental health issues, discrimination and sexual harassment experiences, impact of COVID-19. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed and qualitative content analysis for free-text information. Results Health labour market analysis showed that the numbers of rheumatologists increased markedly between 2000 and 2019 in the groups aged +50 years, but only 9% in younger groups under 50 years; since 2010 the group 40-50 years showed decreases. In 2019, the absolute number of rheumatologists working in healthcare after retirement-age exceeded those aged 40 and under. Survey data revealed a strong mismatch between actual and desired work hours for women and men. 81% rated their workload as high or very high; every sixth rheumatologist has suffered from stress or burnout syndromes at least once in the past. Experiences of gender discrimination and sexual harassment/violence were frequently reported, mostly by women. COVID-19 was an amplifier of stress with major stressors being digitalisation and increased demand for communication and patient education. Conclusions Decreasing health workforce capacities in German rheumatology combine with negative perceptions of work and workplace conditions, threatening both retention and service delivery. Key messages • Small medical specialties, like rheumatology, face severe shortage that threaten healthcare for chronically-ill patients and need greater attention. • COVID-19 has reinforced rheumatologists’ workload and stressors, thus worsing mental health and retention.

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