If you are in distress, you can call or text 988 at any time. If it is an emergency, call 9-1-1 or go to your local emergency department.

Psychological Health and Safety Toolkit for Primary Care Teams and Training Programs

This toolkit aims to empower comprehensive primary care teams and training programs to promote psychological health and safety through a set of curated, evidence-informed resources focused on team-based activities, policies, and practices.
View Resources

What is psychological health and safety?

Psychological health is a form of well-being that allows individuals to think, feel, and behave in a manner that enables them to perform effectively in their work environments, personal lives, and in society at large (Samra et al, 2022).

Psychological safety is a condition in which people are free from threats of harm to their psychological health (MHCC, 2019).

Psychological health and safety is a way people interact with one another as well as the way working conditions and management practices are structured within the workplace (CSA, 2013).

Seven themes for workplace psychological health and safety

The resources in this toolkit are organized by seven themes, based on a clustering of the psychosocial factors identified in Canada’s National Standard for Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace.

Organizational and team culture

Organizational and team culture

Workload and work-life

Workload management and work-life balance

Successful attractive female doctor or surgeon in scrubs standing with folded arms in front of an African male doctor or consultant conceptual of an expert medical team, on white

Clear leadership and expectations

Psychological protection

Protection of physical safety

Protection of physical safety

Portrait of doctor and surgeon in a hospital together

Protection from moral distress

Support for self-care

Support for psychological self-care

Resources

Browse through the list or use the advanced search filters to find the resources that best meet your needs.

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Course/Training/Workshop Icon

Crucial Conversations for Mastering Dialogue: Healthcare

This course teaches nine powerful skills for working through disagreements and concerns in health-care settings to achieve better outcomes for...

Crucial Conversations for Mastering Dialogue: Healthcare

This course teaches nine powerful skills for working through disagreements and concerns in health-care settings to achieve better outcomes for employees and patients.

This link opens an external web page. The Canadian Health Workforce Network and the Mental Health Commission of Canada do not control the quality or omission of translations.

Author(s)/Organization(s)
Crucial Learning
Tags
dialogue, honesty, respect, common ground, effective listening and response, safety
Audience
Health worker, Health-care educator/Trainer, Human resource representative, Manager/Supervisor/Director
Theme
Organizational and team culture, Psychological protection
Cost
Fee
Format
Course/Training/Workshop
Sector
Specific to healthcare
Setting
Learning environment, Hospital, Long-term care, Private clinic, Community care, Online setting
Identity
Not explicitly
Language
English
Course/Training/Workshop Icon

Re-Envisioning ‘About, From, and With’: Thoughts About the Future of Interprofessional Health Education and Practice

This presentation explores interprofessional culture and its pedagogical priorities. It discusses the crucial need to address inequities, power dynamics, and...

Re-Envisioning ‘About, From, and With’: Thoughts About the Future of Interprofessional Health Education and Practice

This presentation explores interprofessional culture and its pedagogical priorities. It discusses the crucial need to address inequities, power dynamics, and other implicit barriers to interprofessional collaboration and outlines priorities essential to improving health and health-care practice for all.

This link opens an external web page. The Canadian Health Workforce Network and the Mental Health Commission of Canada do not control the quality or omission of translations.

Author(s)/Organization(s)
Cohen Konrad
Tags
power dynamics, interprofessionality, inequities
Audience
Health-care educator/Trainer
Theme
Organizational and team culture, Psychological protection
Cost
Free
Format
Course/Training/Workshop
Sector
Specific to healthcare
Setting
Learning environment
Identity
Not explicitly
Language
English
Course/Training/Workshop Icon

Being a Mindful Employee: An Orientation to Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace 

Online training to promote greater understanding of the 13 psychosocial factors outlined in the National Standard of Canada for Psychological...

Being a Mindful Employee: An Orientation to Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace 

Online training to promote greater understanding of the 13 psychosocial factors outlined in the National Standard of Canada for Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace.

This link opens an external web page. The Canadian Health Workforce Network and the Mental Health Commission of Canada do not control the quality or omission of translations.

Author(s)/Organization(s)
Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety
Tags
workplace, Psychological health and safety
Audience
Health worker, Health-care educator/Trainer, Human resource representative, Manager/Supervisor/Director
Theme
Organizational and team culture, Workload management and work-life balance, Clear leadership and expectations, Psychological protection, Protection of physical safety, Protection from moral distress, Support for psychological self-care
Cost
Free
Format
Course/Training/Workshop
Sector
General
Setting
Long-term care, Private clinic, Community care, Home care, Online setting, Hospital
Identity
Not explicitly
Language
English
Article, Article (peer reviewed), Document/Report, Policy/Framework, Program, and Other (Poster presentation)* Icon

Trainees’ Perceptions of Being Allowed to Fail in Clinical Training: A Sense-Making Model

This article explores trainees’ awareness and their experience of failure and allowed failure. Interviews with post-graduate trainees confirm that they...

Trainees’ Perceptions of Being Allowed to Fail in Clinical Training: A Sense-Making Model

This article explores trainees’ awareness and their experience of failure and allowed failure. Interviews with post-graduate trainees confirm that they perceive their failures as valuable learning opportunities.

This link opens an external web page. The Canadian Health Workforce Network and the Mental Health Commission of Canada do not control the quality or omission of translations.

Author(s)/Organization(s)
Klasen, et al.
Tags
failure, sense making model, trainee awareness
Audience
Health-care educator/Trainer, Trainee
Theme
Psychological protection
Cost
Fee
Format
Article (Peer reviewed)
Sector
Specific to healthcare
Setting
Learning environment
Identity
Not explicitly
Language
English

Disclaimer: This inventory is by no means exhaustive. The Canadian Health Workforce Network and the Mental Health Commission of Canada are unable to comment on the quality of individual programs or services. Consequently, their inclusion in this toolkit should not be considered an endorsement of particular programs or organizations.

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