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Friday, June 01, 2018

American health-care workers committing suicide in unprecedented numbers

As America focuses on one epidemic — the opioid crisis — another goes entirely ignored. American health-care workers are dying by suicide in unprecedented numbers. Earlier this month, a medical student and a resident at NYU medical school completed suicide less than a week apart.

My junior colleague took her life just 11 days before her 35th birthday. I had supervised her as she transitioned into practice from fellowship. She said that the way I said her name foretold if the conversation pointed to a weakness or a strength in her patient assessment. My last sight of her was as she drove off to her new job. Less than six months later, she made a life-ending choice.

A scan of her suicide note, asking that I be notified, was emailed to me. I did not show it to anyone. The news of her suicide was announced by an email in the department. We all went about our business, as if suicide by a young colleague is usual. And perhaps, in a way it is.

After all, physician suicide — and more broadly health-care worker suicide — is a huge issue in the U.S. In my own experience, I have lost six colleagues to suicide — five physicians and one physician assistant. That does not include the suicides that I have heard about through the whisper network at work.

My junior colleague was among an estimated 400 physicians who took their lives in 2016.

More here

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Based on my personal experiences with "medical professionals", I know a few who would improve the medical field if they were not in it. And also a few I would like to help them be successful in their suicide attempt.

Anonymous said...

2:32 I agree I know of two PAs in a large doctors office in Salisbury that are dangerous.

Anonymous said...

I am not a fan of any nursing homes In Salisbury,my husband spent a lot of time in them before passing in 2016 and my sister died in one ,she would call me and tell me stories that were hard to believe ,but was not a choice and her stories were about the nurses .it does take a toll on the people that have
to take care of pain and suffering