Workforce shortages and supported access to medical care for hospital employees: a scoping review
Vera Beulen, Cindy Noben, Martijn Smits, Helen Mertens, Aggie Paulus, Walther Van MookObjectives
This scoping review synthesises peer-reviewed and grey literature on supported access to medical care for hospital employees with existing physical health complaints to understand how it may reduce sickness absenteeism by promoting sustainable employability and to identify gaps and opportunities to inform the design and implementation of organisational supported care frameworks.
Design
We conducted this scoping review following the Arksey and O’Malley framework and Levac et al ’s methodological recommendations, reported in accordance with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extensions for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR).
Data sources
MEDLINE (Ovid), Embase (Elsevier), CINAHL (EBSCO) and Web of Science were searched from database inception to 8 November 2024. The search was updated on 18 May 2026. This was supplemented by forward and backward citation tracking of included peer-reviewed articles and targeted hand searching of Dutch grey literature in Medisch Contact
Eligibility
English-language or Dutch-language peer-reviewed publications and well-argued opinion pieces on healthcare workers’ access to care (COVID-19 and beyond) in hospital or transferable settings were included. Sources focused on mental health or health promotion, financial aspects, personal protective equipment, patient access or healthcare worker utilisation, as well as non-English/Dutch sources, webpages and papers without full text, were excluded.
Data extraction
ASReview was used for title and abstract screening following the SAFE procedure and full-text screening was conducted with team consensus.
Results
27 publications were included from 36 685 identified records. The literature was predominantly qualitative in nature and COVID-19-focused, yielding four themes (ethical considerations, multilevel challenges, target groups and strategies and outcomes). It also highlighted limited evidence on evaluated supported-access interventions and workforce outcomes beyond crises.
Conclusions
Although supported access to medical care for hospital employees appears a promising multilevel, system-embedded strategy to reduce sickness absenteeism and promote sustainable employability in general, the evidence to substantiate and justify such strategies beyond acute crises is limited. Moreover, current literature lacks clear conceptualisation, operationalisation as well as robust implementation and evaluation frameworks. Addressing these gaps is a priority for future research to scientifically scaffold policies and frameworks to sustain a healthy and stable future hospital workforce.