MPs’ staff survey finds distress at levels
similar to frontline NHS workers
Exclusive: many struggling with ‘toxic’ workload,
safety fears and vicarious trauma from helping desperate constituents
Josh
Halliday North of England correspondent
Mon 6 Feb
2023 06.00 GMT
Staff
working for MPs face similar levels of psychological distress as frontline NHS
workers, a survey has found, amid a “toxic” workload and fears for their
safety.
A study of
315 parliamentary workers, the largest of its kind, found many were struggling
with the vicarious trauma of helping desperate people in a worsening cost of
living crisis.
MPs’
caseworkers said there had been a “worrying upturn” in the number of suicidal
people seeking their help in the past year.
Thomas
Fairweather, of the parliamentary Wellness Working Group (WWG), which
commissioned the report, said: “Parliament has shown that it is trying to do
more but there is still quite a contingent of staff on the cusp of burnout, if
not into burnout, with nowhere to go.”
The survey
found 42% of MPs’ staff met the clinical definition of experiencing
psychological distress. This is three times higher than in the general
population, and similar to levels seen in frontline NHS workers, according to
Dr Ashley Weinberg, a psychologist who studied the findings.
Two-thirds
of those surveyed described their work as “emotionally draining” and one in 10
said it was “harrowing”. Staff said it was not unusual to open horrifying mail
detailing child abuse, or containing pictures of maimed or dead children.
While the
levels of bullying in parliament were found to be lower than in the average workplace,
more than one in three said they had experienced unreasonable behaviour in the
office, in person or online. Nearly one in 10 said this happened “always” or
“very frequently”.
Dominic
Raab, the deputy prime minister and justice secretary, is under investigation
over allegations of bullying from about two dozen civil servants across three
government departments.
Rishi Sunak
has refused to say whether he knew about informal complaints before appointing
him. Raab has vowed to “thoroughly rebut and refute” the formal complaints. He
has said he is confident he “acted professionally” throughout his time in three
different cabinet posts.
Nearly
two-thirds of those surveyed said they had feared for their own or colleagues’
safety at work. Almost 40% said they hid the nature of their work from friends
and family.
One worker
said: “The constituency office is unsafe and has been attacked several times by
angry members of the public. The MP is never really there so doesn’t care.
There is no hot running water or windows and no safe means of escape.”
Another
said: “Our MP refused the offer of CCTV at the constituency office, without
consulting office-based staff.”
Weinberg, a
senior lecturer in psychology at the University of Salford, said there were
examples of Westminster supporting office staff but that parliament could go
further. “What we’re seeing is people desperately trying to do a good job. But
the challenges and the working conditions, and the sheer number of demands and
workload, is overwhelming,” he said.
Estelle
Warhurst, who works for an MP and helps run the WWG, said there had in recent
months been an upturn in the number of “actively suicidal” people contacting
MPs’ offices for help.
She said:
“There’s a higher level of people in mental distress present to MPs’ offices.
Things are more complex, particularly under the current climate where people
have multi-factor issues.”
Fairweather,
who also works for an MP, said it had been an uphill battle to get more support
for caseworkers, but that training had been introduced in recent years around
handling suicidal callers and vicarious trauma.
However, he
said parliament could do more. “There is something almost perverse about
expecting a 22-year-old in their first proper job to triage a case of child
abuse versus a case of someone who’s been made homeless – and then expect them
to then go home at the end of the day and have no follow-up care, no mandated
care of any kind,” he said.
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