Burnout, PTSD, and Medical Error: The Medico-Legal Implications of the Mental Health Crisis Among Frontline Healthcare Professionals During COVID-19
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Burnout in Healthcare Professionals
Burnout Characteristics Before and During the Pandemic
4. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Healthcare Workers
4.1. The Overlap Between PTSD and Burnout
4.2. PTSD in Healthcare Workers Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic
5. The Link Between Mental Health and Medical Error
5.1. How Mental Health of the Healthcare Workers Affects Performance
5.2. Empirical Evidence Linking Mental Health to Medical Errors
5.3. Confounding Factors in the Mental Health—Medical Error Relationship
6. Legal Implications
7. Limitations
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Topic | Methodology | PubMed Keywords |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Burnout in Healthcare Professionals | Systematic review and meta-analysis of burnout prevalence, dimensions (emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, reduced personal accomplishment), and consequences across healthcare settings | “burnout” AND “healthcare workers” “Maslach Burnout Inventory” AND (“physicians” OR “nurses”) “emotional exhaustion” AND “medical professionals” “burnout” AND “COVID-19” AND “healthcare” “depersonalization” AND “clinical practice” “professional efficacy” AND “burnout syndrome” “burnout” AND “patient safety” |
| 2. Burnout Characteristics During the COVID-19 Pandemic | Comparative analysis of pre-pandemic versus pandemic burnout rates; examination of moral injury and ethical distress as pandemic-specific phenomena | “burnout” AND “COVID-19 pandemic” AND “healthcare” “moral distress” AND “pandemic” AND “nurses” “frontline workers” AND “burnout” AND “SARS-CoV-2” “redeployment” AND “burnout” AND “healthcare workers” “moral injury” AND “COVID-19” AND “physicians” “burnout” AND “intensive care” AND “pandemic” “ethical distress” AND “healthcare” AND “coronavirus” |
| 3. Post-traumatic Stress Disorder in Healthcare Workers | Systematic review of PTSD prevalence, diagnostic criteria (DSM-5, ICD-11), trauma exposure pathways, and differentiation from acute stress disorder, vicarious trauma, and secondary traumatic stress | “PTSD” AND “healthcare workers” “post-traumatic stress disorder” AND (“nurses” OR “physicians”) “secondary traumatic stress” AND “medical staff” “vicarious trauma” AND “healthcare professionals” “workplace violence” AND “PTSD” AND “hospital staff” “critical incidents” AND “trauma” AND “emergency medicine” “trauma exposure” AND “first responders” “acute stress disorder” AND “healthcare” |
| 4. The Overlap Between PTSD and Burnout | Cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis of comorbidity patterns, shared risk factors, and bidirectional relationships between PTSD and burnout | “PTSD” AND “burnout” AND “healthcare” “comorbidity” AND “trauma” AND “occupational stress” “second victim” AND “burnout” AND “PTSD” “bidirectional relationship” AND “mental health” AND “clinicians” (“PTSD” OR “post-traumatic stress”) AND “emotional exhaustion” “trauma” AND “depersonalization” AND “healthcare workers” |
| 5. Impact of COVID-19 on PTSD in Healthcare Workers | Meta-analysis of pandemic-related PTSD prevalence, comparison with pre-pandemic rates, and analysis of COVID-specific stressors (PPE shortages, infection fear, mass death exposure) | “PTSD” AND “COVID-19” AND “healthcare workers” “pandemic” AND “post-traumatic stress” AND (“ICU staff” OR “intensive care”) “frontline workers” AND “psychological trauma” AND “coronavirus” “PPE shortage” AND “mental health” AND “pandemic” “infection fear” AND “PTSD” AND “healthcare” “mass casualty” AND “trauma” AND “COVID-19” “pandemic stress” AND “nurses” AND “PTSD” |
| 6. The Link Between Mental Health and Medical Error | Systematic review examining causal pathways, mechanisms (cognitive, emotional, physiological), and types of errors associated with mental health conditions | “medical errors” AND “burnout” AND “physicians” “patient safety” AND “mental health” AND “healthcare workers” “diagnostic errors” AND (“cognitive impairment” OR “stress”) “adverse events” AND “burnout” AND “nurses” “medication errors” AND “fatigue” AND “healthcare” “medical mistakes” AND “psychological distress” “preventable harm” AND “clinician wellbeing” |
| 7. How Mental Health of Healthcare Workers Affects Performance | Analysis of cognitive neuroscience evidence, neurobiological pathways, and performance metrics linking mental health decline to impaired clinical decision-making and error monitoring | “cognitive function” AND “burnout” AND “healthcare” “decision-making” AND “stress” AND “physicians” “executive function” AND “exhaustion” AND “medical professionals” “sleep deprivation” AND “medical errors” “attention” AND “burnout” AND “clinical performance” “working memory” AND “occupational stress” AND “healthcare” “prefrontal cortex” AND “chronic stress” AND “cognition” “emotional dysregulation” AND “burnout” |
| 8. Empirical Evidence Linking Mental Health to Medical Errors | Meta-analysis and systematic review of observational studies quantifying associations; analysis of second victim phenomenon and malpractice-related psychological distress | “self-reported errors” AND “burnout” AND “meta-analysis” “patient safety incidents” AND “PTSD” AND “healthcare” “second victim phenomenon” AND “medical errors” “malpractice” AND “psychological distress” AND “physicians” (“adverse events” OR “safety incidents”) AND “mental health” AND “nurses” “surgical errors” AND “burnout” AND “surgeons” “medication errors” AND “emotional exhaustion” “second victim” AND “trauma” AND “healthcare” |
| 9. Confounding Factors in the Mental Health—Medical Error Relationship | Critical analysis of system-level factors (staffing, workload, resources), organizational culture, individual resilience, and methodological limitations (measurement bias, self-report) | “healthcare systems” AND “burnout” AND “COVID-19” “workload” AND “staffing” AND “medical errors” “organizational support” AND “mental health” AND “healthcare” “resilience” AND “burnout” AND “protective factors” “measurement bias” AND “self-reported” AND “burnout” “work environment” AND “patient safety” “staffing levels” AND “adverse events” “organizational culture” AND “safety climate” “confounding factors” AND “burnout” AND “errors” |
| Population/Review Focus | Sample Size | Burnout Metric and Prevalence | Key Details/Subdomains |
|---|---|---|---|
| All healthcare workers, global [61] | 250 studies, n ≈ 293,000 | Burnout 43.6% (95% CI: 36.3–51.2) | Same meta-analysis: PTSD symptoms 30.6% (23.6–38.5) |
| All HCWs during COVID-19 (MBI only) [62] | 7 studies, n = 5022 | High/moderate EE: 45% + 37%; DP: 49% + 18%; low PA: 38% + 51% | Severe levels common in all 3 domains |
| All HCWs, mixed tools [18] | Mixed | Overall burnout 52% (40–63%) | EE 51% (42–61%), DP 52% (39–65%), low PA 28% (25–31%) |
| Nurses during COVID-19 (updated meta-analysis) [63] | 19 studies | Any burnout 59.5% | EE 36.1%; DP 32.4%; low PA 33.3% |
| Nurses during COVID-19 (MBI-focused, early pandemic) [64] | 16 studies, n = 18,935 | EE 34.1%; DP 12.6%; low PA 15.2% | High heterogeneity |
| Nurses across health emergencies incl. COVID [65] | 176 studies | Overall burnout 48% (42–55%) | Higher in ICU/ED (SMD 0.10) and with COVID exposure |
| Physicians during COVID-19 [17] | 45 studies | Overall burnout 54.6% (46.7–62.2) | Early pandemic 60.7% vs. late 49.3%; frontline OR 1.64 vs. 2nd line |
| Physicians during COVID-19 [66] | 30 studies | Burnout range 6–99.8% | No pooled %; high heterogeneity; highlights tool variability |
| ICU physicians (pre- and during COVID-19) [67] | 18 studies | High-level burnout 41% (0.33–0.50) | EE 28%; DP 33%; low PA 38% |
| ICU nurses (pre- and during COVID-19) [67] | 20 studies | High-level burnout 44% (0.34–0.55) | During COVID: 61% vs. 37% pre-COVID (p = 0.003) |
| ICU and ED HCWs during COVID-19 [68] | 11 studies | Overall burnout 49–58% | Nurses at higher risk; shortages, worry, stigma key drivers |
| Emergency department HCWs (global) [69] | 29 studies, n = 16,619 | Overall burnout 43%; high-risk burnout 35% | High EE 39%, high DP 43%, low PA 36%; higher during COVID |
| Central Asia HCWs (3 countries) [57] | n = 2685 | Occupational burnout 28.3% | Severe COVID history OR up to 2.27 for burnout |
| Polish HCWs, 5 groups [60] | n = 2196 | Burnout 27.7–36.5% by role; 36.5% in nurses | High stress OR 3.88; traumatic events OR 1.91; mobbing OR 1.83 |
| Oncology HCWs Wuhan (frontline vs. usual wards) [70] | Mixed | Burnout 13% frontline vs. 39% usual wards | FL staff less worried about infection, more team coherence |
| Population | Pre-Pandemic Prevalence | During COVID-19 Pandemic | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall Healthcare Workers | |||
| HCWs (general) | 15–20% | 25–34% (pooled meta-analysis) | +10–14 percentage points [149] |
| HCWs (severe PTSD) | ~10% | 14% | +4 percentage points [149] |
| By Professional Role | |||
| Nurses (general) | 14–18% | 25–29.1% | Nearly doubled [132,152] |
| ICU nurses | 18–24% | 29–51.5% | +11–27 percentage points [144,153] |
| Physicians (general) | 10–15% | 18–25% | +8–10 percentage points |
| Frontline HCWs | 15–20% | 34–55.2% | Nearly tripled [154] |
| ICU Staff Specifically | |||
| ICU professionals (mild-severe) | 3.3–24% | 16–73.3% | Up to 7-fold increase [145] |
| Domain | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Organizational/Institutional | |
| Workload Management | Implement maximum patient-to-nurse ratios (recommended 1:4 for medical-surgical units) |
| Mandatory minimum 11 h rest periods between shifts | |
| Limit consecutive shift length to maximum 12 h | |
| Protected non-clinical time for documentation | |
| Psychological Support Systems | Establish structured peer support programs (e.g., Schwartz Rounds, RISE programme) |
| Implement second victim response teams with 24/7 availability | |
| Provide confidential counselling services with guaranteed anonymity from licensing boards | |
| Implement regular mental health screening using opt-out model | |
| Establish critical incident stress debriefing protocols (within 72 h of adverse events) | |
| Culture Change | Implement blame-free error reporting systems (Safety-II approach) |
| Mandatory leadership training on psychological safety | |
| Establish regular communication forums between administration and clinical staff | |
| Recognise and celebrate near-miss reporting as safety improvement | |
| Individual-Level | |
| Stress Reduction | Mindfulness-based stress reduction programmes (8-week MBSR) |
| Facilitate access to cognitive-behavioural therapy | |
| Resilience training programmes (with caution against victim-blaming) | |
| Self-Care | Sleep hygiene education and fatigue management |
| Peer support group participation | |
| Policy/Regulatory | |
| Licensing Reform | Reform medical licensing questions regarding mental health treatment history |
| Legal Protections | Implement safe harbour provisions for good-faith error reporting and disclosure |
| Compensation Reform | Consider no-fault administrative compensation systems for medical injuries |
| Accreditation | Mandate organisational wellness metrics in hospital accreditation standards |
| Research Funding | Dedicated funding for intervention effectiveness research |
| Research Priorities | |
| Longitudinal Studies | Track burnout → medical errors → second victim trajectories over time |
| Intervention Trials | Conduct randomised controlled trials of organisational interventions |
| Economic Analyses | Perform cost-effectiveness and return-on-investment analyses of wellness programmes |
| Measurement Validation | Validate burnout and PTSD screening tools across diverse healthcare populations |
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© 2026 by the authors. Published by MDPI on behalf of the Lithuanian University of Health Sciences. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
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Hostiuc, S.; Gherghiceanu, F. Burnout, PTSD, and Medical Error: The Medico-Legal Implications of the Mental Health Crisis Among Frontline Healthcare Professionals During COVID-19. Medicina 2026, 62, 305. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62020305
Hostiuc S, Gherghiceanu F. Burnout, PTSD, and Medical Error: The Medico-Legal Implications of the Mental Health Crisis Among Frontline Healthcare Professionals During COVID-19. Medicina. 2026; 62(2):305. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62020305
Chicago/Turabian StyleHostiuc, Sorin, and Florentina Gherghiceanu. 2026. "Burnout, PTSD, and Medical Error: The Medico-Legal Implications of the Mental Health Crisis Among Frontline Healthcare Professionals During COVID-19" Medicina 62, no. 2: 305. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62020305
APA StyleHostiuc, S., & Gherghiceanu, F. (2026). Burnout, PTSD, and Medical Error: The Medico-Legal Implications of the Mental Health Crisis Among Frontline Healthcare Professionals During COVID-19. Medicina, 62(2), 305. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62020305

