We're being quite careful with our medics here work-schedule wise.
Where possible, we keep them on 'normal' rotating shifts to prevent finding ourselves in a situation where our doctors are sitting at home with a burnout.
There's concern about their mental wellbeing though, for the many deaths they see, and worse, having to tell families all day long that they will need to stay home and let their loved ones die all alone, are taking it's toll on their mental health. Over here each hospital has round the clock psych care for their doctors and nurses in the building.
It is expected that when this is over, a lot of doctors will need PTSD care.
And a lot of families will need extensive grief councelling for not having been able to say goodbye.
The future looks bright for psychologists and psychiatrists.
I don't want to get too involved in what goes on in other countries but for what I've seem the situation is similar worldwide: lack of PPE, people getting infected.... But not so much work overload except for the departments most involved. Aka: A&E, Internal Medicine, Intensive Care. Also diagnostics departments, to a greater or lesser extent I guess. Others, not so much.
I am also highly skeptical about your doctors being as cared for as you think. The international pattern is that goverments put up a show about looking for PPE, about supporting doctors (lots of clapping) etc... but in practice the PPE never quite materializes in the quantitoes that were promised, the support is just words, and there is quite a bit of repression. I've heard the same tale time and again from my friends in Spain, UK, Ireland. I read similar testimonies from the US.
I think its everywhere tbh