| Literature DB >> 29712575 |
Abstract
This article focuses on doctors and suicide. It provides real examples to illustrate why doctors die by their own hand. These reasons are replicated in the general population, but also include a host of additional risk factors related to being a doctor. In each case, information about the doctor is in the public domain or, as in one case, consent from the next of kin has been obtained for a detail not in the public domain. The author is a doctors' doctor, heading up a confidential health service for doctors with mental illness or addiction, the National Health Service Practitioner Health Programme. Mortality data from the programme (January 2008-January 2017) will also be included. For the sake of confidentiality, data is collated and details regarding age and gender have been approximated.Declaration of interestNone.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29712575 PMCID: PMC6436060 DOI: 10.1192/bjb.2018.11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJPsych Bull ISSN: 2056-4694
Analysis of patients seen at the National Health Service Practitioner Health Programme who have died, and their involvement with General Medical Council (GMC) procedures
| Cause of death | Number of patients | GMC involvement |
|---|---|---|
| All deaths | 21 | 11 |
| Overdose drugs/alcohol or accidents | 10 | 9 |
| Suicide | 6 |
Relationship between regulatory processes and mental illness in doctors
| Relationship between suicide in doctors and complaints/regulatory or disciplinary processes |
|
A complaint may lead to a doctor becoming depressed or worsen a pre-existing mental illness. Mental illness can lead to cognitive impairment, which can lead to a boundary transgression or inappropriate behaviour such as bullying or acting inappropriately with a patient or work colleague. Mental illness might lead to out-of-character criminal behaviour (such as shoplifting), which itself can lead to worsening of the mental illness. Mental illness might involve criminal activity; for example, drug use. Drug use can lead doctors transgressing good medical practice, such as stealing drugs, self-prescribing or prescribing in a patient's name for the doctor's own use. Mental illness in itself might be considered counter to fitness-to-practise; for example, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, personality disorder or schizoaffective disorder. The very act of trying to kill oneself might lead to criminal or professional sanctions where the means of the suicide attempt involves obtaining drugs illegally or via self-prescription. |