Research Article: AI-driven mental health decision support linked to clinician resilience and preparedness
Abstract:
Mental health services are facing unprecedented demand, placing significant pressure on clinicians to conduct timely and effective patient assessments. Rising staff turnover and burnout threatens service quality across many countries. This study examined whether providing clinical information, collected via an artificial intelligence (AI)—enabled decision support tool for mental health assessments in the UK's National Health Service (NHS), was associated with differences in clinician wellbeing and patient assessment performance.
In this observational study, we surveyed mental health clinicians ( N =?131) from nine NHS Mental Health Talking Therapies services on how the information provided by an AI-based decision-support tool related to their experience with conducting clinical assessments. Clinicians reported on assessments where information from the AI tool was available, as well as when it was not (e.g., general practitioner referrals or telephone intakes). Outcomes included clinician wellbeing, task performance, and cognitive load during assessments, with additional analyses assessing the influence of moderating factors, such as clinician experience, workload, and exposure to the tool.
Relative to traditional methods, assessments supported by information provided by the AI tool were associated with significantly higher clinician wellbeing and task performance, and significantly lower cognitive load, irrespective of the clinician's experience. These associations were magnified by workload.
These findings provide preliminary evidence that AI-powered pre-assessment tools may be associated with differences in clinician experience including higher wellbeing, higher task performance, and lower cognitive burden. By targeting systemic drivers of burnout, such tools may represent a potentially scalable approach to support workforce sustainability and service quality in mental health care.
Introduction:
Mental health services are experiencing unprecedented demand, with dramatic increases of up to 40% compared to pre-pandemic levels ( 1 ). This is further exacerbated through above-average staff turnover in mental health services and disproportionately high vacancy rates ( 2 ). Due to budgetary constraints across many healthcare services worldwide, this directly translates to mounting pressures on mental health services, creating unsustainable workloads for clinicians. Large caseloads and insufficient…
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