HEALTH MATTERS

David Noonan

Doctors Who Kill Themselves

Every year, between 300 and 400 doctors take their own lives—roughly one a day. No other profession has a higher suicide rate.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: considered_thoughts @ 05/23/2008 9:38:57 PM

    To MDWIFE, your attitude is disgusting - and you probably picked it up from your doctor husband. Yes, some people end up in the medical system after years of making poor lifestyle choices. So we need more education and support for those people, but also to teach them that the doctors won't save them. But as someone who was totally healthy before dealing with the medical system recently, your story doesn't always hold. Sometimes the doctors make poor judgments, don't touch or spend time with patients, are extremely arrogant, leave too much care to their juniors, and don't adequately consider the pain and discomfort of their patients. The system as a whole is completely broken and doctors are not the only ones to blame. But for doctors to turn around and blame the patients is completely cowardly scapegoatism. And the last kind of doctor I want around me is a coward. Better they should find a new job, not resort to killing themselves.

    The problem is that good doctors work extra hours, are compassionate, have to fight with their colleagues and the system to provide adequate care, and aren't provided with the opportunities to learn how to enhance health rather than just cut out or drug disease. I wonder if it's those doctors who are killing themselves in higher numbers. Good doctors need more support - more resources to do their job and more support to deal with their lives.

    But these bad, selfish, patient-blaming doctors need to quit. Enough's enough.

  • Posted By: todhovis @ 05/07/2008 10:31:13 AM

    Does suicide always mean depression? Is suicide not a reasonable alternative to something worse than death? I am a rural physician, neither sad nor depressed, but I have concluded that there are diseases and conditions worse than dying. Advanced dementia, ALS, severe whole body burns, and quadraplegia come to mind. Perhaps some of the physician suicides are rational choices by professionals who have seen the suffering of others and have chosen death.

  • Posted By: sabinas510 @ 04/27/2008 2:58:34 PM

    After six years of working at a Level One Trauma Center, I believe I can safely say that depression is an underrecognized and undertreated condition, just as this article points out. However, the cause and the treatment is much more complicated than the average day depression diagnosis we make in clinics. Unlike my college roommate who is now suffering from post-partum depression and has had her mother move in with her to share the responsibility of caring for her adorible two month old and is popping a zoloft a day, my co-workers/fellow residents can't so easily alter her work environment.

    Perhaps more accurate than 'depression', we should probably describe what most health-care workers go through as a variety of post-traumatic stress disorder. After eight years of higher education and altruistic dreams of 'helping people', we join residencies where tired, over-worked and jaded coworkers and superiors teach us to separate ourselves from our emotions in order to survive. And those coworkers are right - how elese does one emotionally and rationally survive riding a gurney up to the operating room pounding on a chest, only to have the man die? How else does one survive informing parents, pregnant wives, children that thier loved one has died despite our best efforts? How else does one survive trying to live up to the false hopes that prevail in the layman's mind about the infalibility of medical technology?

    There are dozens of papers on the prevalence of PTSD in special situations, such as war zone health care workers, I posit that everyday 'ordinary' health care is traumatic enough to create mental and emotional distress. Perhaps if we recognize this, we may try to pre-empt the formation of pathology by encouraging dialogue between residents and mentors/chaplains/therapists to better process the horrors of living and training in a hospital.

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