Doctors have the highest suicide rate.
Patients may be surprised to realize that doctors get depressed and commit suicide. But what may be even more surprising is the fact that doctors have the highest rate of suicide in the country. Physicians in America have the highest rate of any profession: twice the number of suicides as the general population.
According to Medscape: physicians have at least one completed suicide daily despite the fact that they are surrounded by other medical professions.
54% of people who commit suicide have no known prior mental health condition.
The commonest method is with firearms, followed by hanging or strangulation. Montana has the highest incidence of suicide and Washington DC the lowest, in the United States.
I had planned to write this blog a couple of months ago
when I read about a doctor and a final
year medical student, at the same hospital in New York, committing suicide in
the same week.
I didn’t get around to it because I was extremely busy and
getting ready for my safari to South Africa.
But, in less than the 2 weeks that I was gone: two well known
celebrities hung themselves. It is becoming an urgent issue: according to the CDC the rates are definitely increasing, having risen 25% since 1999.
Whenever someone kills themselves I always think about what
a waste of a life it is, and I often wonder if they are aware of the pain and
suffering they bring to their loved ones and friends.
The people left behind feel like failures, they feel helpless and empty, soul searching for what they could have done differently.
Doctors, clearly, must do a better job of
suicide prevention both for our patients and ourselves. Doctors are taught the
symptoms of depression which should give them an advantage yet they too succumb
to suicide. How much more people who don't understand what they maybe going
through. It is up to us to assure them that the cloud will lift, even if it doesn't feel like it.
Please look at the suicide prevention website or call the national suicide prevention lifeline for more information and educate yourself.
In a nutshell: if you are depressed seek assistance from your
doctor immediately. If you are on anti-depressant medication follow up with
your doctor regularly even if you think nothing has changed.
Learn the signs of
depression and if your friends, family or co-workers exhibit them, encourage
them to get help. Do not be afraid to ask people you care about, you will not give them an idea too commit suicide if they haven't already considered it.
Depression is like any other medical condition and there
should not be a stigma attached to it. By understanding the condition and
removing the stigma, people will be more willing to share how they are feeling
with others.
Dr. Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the CDC said there are simple steps anyone can take to help someone at risk. "Beginning a conversation, helping keep them safe, helping them connect and then follow up with them," she said. "We don't think every single suicide can be prevented, but many are preventable."
Together we can all save lives!
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