Working in healthcare can be a deeply meaningful, rewarding, and human experience, but it can also be profoundly challenging. Across Ireland, many doctors and healthcare professionals are under immense pressure that sometimes goes far beyond their job descriptions. Long hours, emotional intensity, rota gaps, and the constant responsibility of caring for others can slowly push joy to the edges of your everyday life.
Burnout amongst clinicians is a rising concern and the numbers tell a troubling story. In Ireland, recent surveys suggest that around 70% of healthcare workers are experiencing signs of burnout, with those in high pressure roles or early in their careers particularly likely to be affected.
Behind these figures are real people doing their best in a system that often leaves very little space for rest, recovery, or joy.
At Global Medics, our work is all about making a difference together – and this means caring for our hard-working clinicians across Ireland. We speak to doctors everyday who love their work but feel disconnected from the things that once made them feel alive, grounded, and fulfilled.
How to Start Bringing Joy Back into Your Life
These ideas come from psychological research, wellbeing studies, and the lived experiences of doctors who have found ways to reconnect with themselves, even during their busiest times.
- Give yourself permission to enjoy what YOU genuinely love
It sounds simple, but many clinicians find this hard to do. It can be easy to lose sight of your own preferences. Remember that joy is a deeply personal thing, whether you find it hiking up mountains or quietly reading in the garden with a cup of coffee; what matters is that it feels meaningful and restorative to you, not whether it looks impressive to anyone else. - Start small and make it realistic
Clinicians often put immense pressure on themselves to make major lifestyle changes overnight. Instead – start small - with realistic moments of enjoyment that can fit into your everyday life. It can be as simple as 10 minutes of listening to your favourite music, dancing around the kitchen, or taking a short walk outside. Keep in mind that small and consistent steps are far more sustainable and effective over time. - Harness the power of positive memories
Recalling positive memories can help to calm your nervous system during stressful times and bring back feelings of safety, connection and joy. Even when time and energy are limited, reconnecting with joyful memories can have a powerful effect on your emotional wellbeing. Taking a few moments to vividly remember a happy experience can be particularly valuable during stressful moments at work, offering a quick and accessible way to reset emotionally. So, why not list your Top 3 Joyful Memories on your phone now and carry them with you wherever you go!
A Gentle Reminder: You deserve joy!
You deserve to feel joy. Not because you have “earned it” after hours of heavy work, but simply because you are human and deserve to be happy and gentle with yourself. Healthcare is demanding, and the emotional load can be huge. Joy helps you to stay connected to the parts of yourself that exist beyond your role: the parts that make you feel whole and alive as a human being.
And because you give so much to others, you deserve support too. At Global Medics, we are committed to supporting your wellbeing – not only at work but across your whole life.
We are partnering with The Joyful Doctor to offer a series of free wellbeing webinars for busy healthcare professionals. If you are one of our Doctors, sign up today to take part and start your journey to greater wellbeing and greater joy!
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Sources:
NHS Staff Survey 2024 – Burnout, presenteeism, and wellbeing indicators (NHS England, 2024)
HSE Occupational Health & Wellbeing Report – Burnout among healthcare workers in Ireland (HSE, 2024)
WHO Health Workforce Wellbeing Report – Global burnout trends in healthcare (World Health Organization, 2022–2024)