The General Optical Council (GOC) has published new research exploring the lived experiences of registrants who have experienced harassment, bullying, abuse or discrimination at work, and the impact this has on them and their ability to provide safe patient care.
The qualitative research, carried out by Explain Market Research, includes 38 in-depth interviews with optometrists and dispensing opticians. All had experience of harassment, bullying, abuse or discrimination at work – either as a single issue or had experienced multiple issues. It was commissioned following the findings from recent GOC registrant surveys which highlight the high incidence of bullying, harassment, abuse and discrimination in the optical workplace.
The interviews revealed the complexities of mistreatment and its potential long-term implications:
- Workplace culture: Participants identified a loss of job satisfaction over recent years due to an increase in workload, commercial pressures and interprofessional dynamics.
- Mistreatment in the workplace: Participants discussed experiences with physical, verbal or cyber bullying; discrimination based on gender, religion, race or sexuality; harassment at work, typically in the form of sexual harassment; and abusive comments and aggressive behaviours from patients.
Participants also discussed the impacts of experiencing mistreatment at work relating to harassment, bullying, abuse or discrimination. These included:
- Mental health impacts (e.g. experiencing stress, anxiety and/or depression)
- Physical symptoms (such as dizziness, migraines)
- Personal life impacts (such as a change in their self-confidence/self-esteem)
- Reduced engagement in their work and/or career progression.
A notable finding is the trend for people carrying their experiences of harassment, bullying, abuse or discrimination at work with them throughout their career. This could impact their career choices, such as working patterns, what type of practice they worked in, and whether to work as a locum or as a permanent member of staff.
Some participants felt that patient care may have been indirectly impacted as a result of the impacts of their mistreatment, for example in providing less personal or ‘caring’ care.
Several barriers were identified to disclosing negative experiences, including:
- Not being able to find the right person to raise concerns to
- Worry about adverse impacts of reporting, such as threatening their reputation or career prospect
- Concern about reporting behaviour with no evidence
- Low faith in change.
Participants also discussed ways in which they thought bullying, harassment, abuse and discrimination could be effectively addressed in the workplace, such as:
- A roadmap of what to do if they experience these behaviours
- An established leader within this roadmap to address concerns
- Peer support
- Career-long education regarding how to recognise and act upon mistreatment
- Leadership from the GOC to provide industry wide communication of both expectations of appropriate behaviour and consequences if these expectations are breached.
Steve Brooker, Director of Regulatory Strategy, said:
“This powerful report reveals the devastating personal impacts of bullying, harassment, abuse and discrimination in the workplace. It also demonstrates the potential patient safety consequences of these behaviours, which gives the GOC a clear public protection mandate to act.
In 2023, along with professional and membership bodies, we issued a joint statement committing to a zero-tolerance approach to bullying, harassment, abuse, and discrimination across all working environments, in response to findings in our workforce survey. We have since strengthened our standards of practice to help promote more inclusive workplace environments and ensure businesses support those who have faced these negative behaviours.
We are committed to using our regulatory levers to tackle negative workplace culture, but making real change requires a sector wide effort. It’s in everyone’s interests to address these issues, since otherwise optical careers will become less attractive and professionals will end their optical careers early.
I’m grateful to everyone that took part for having the courage to share their experiences and shine a spotlight on this difficult topic.”
In the interviews, participants called on the GOC to clarify how it would respond if its standards of practice were breached. The following is intended to help registrants and stakeholders understand the GOC’s approach to fitness to practise work in such cases.
“Whilst we recognise that most workplace concerns are best dealt with at a local level, we may investigate more serious cases of harassment, bullying, abuse and discrimination. Each case is assessed on its own merits, taking into account the seriousness of the concerns and whether there is sufficient evidence, or a clear indication that evidence is available, to support the allegations. Where cases do not meet our acceptance criteria for a formal investigation, we may provide informal advice to the registrant reminding them of the standards they are expected to maintain. We also keep a record of such concerns so that, should similar issues be raised in the future, we can review them in context.
Discrimination undermines public confidence in the profession and has the potential to pose a serious risk to patient safety. A more serious sanction is likely to be appropriate where a case involves direct or indirect discrimination against patients, colleagues or other people who share protected characteristics either within or outside their professional life.”