Medicine is the Deadliest Profession: It Needn’t Be

10 Steps to Prevent Physician Suicide for 2019

Each year, the graduating classes of three average size medical schools don’t add a single physician to the US workforce; they simply replace the 300 to 400 physicians the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention estimates kill themselves each year. We lose a doctor a day to suicide.

In a recent blog post a healthcare CEO asked, “Is the rate of physician suicide statistically different from that of other highly paid professionals?” Yes.

The American Psychiatric Association reported that physicians have the highest suicide rate of any profession at their annual meeting in 2018, higher in fact than active duty military personnel.

The same is true for Finland, Norway, Australia, Singapore and China.

The time to prevent physician suicide, rigorously document its occurrence, remove the stigma of seeking mental health care and to care for suicide victims’ workplace survivors is long overdue.

Physicians know how to stay healthy. This is why it is especially tragic that the only cause of death where the risk to physicians is higher than the general public is suicide.

Worse, we’ve been aware of this slow motion tragedy for generations and it is largely preventable. S. Dana Hubbard, M. D., Director, Bureau of Public Health Education, New York City Department of Health published the fact that physicians lead the list of suicides by professions in the American Journal of Public Health, in 1922.

Almost a century later mystery still shrouds the exact number of physician suicides each year as families and employers alike are reluctant to tell the truth in public, due to the fear of stigma. Medical examiners may have difficulty distinguishing intentional from unintentional traumatic deaths. Even when a suicide is accurately determined, there is no consistent reporting of the victim’s occupation.

Most experts agree the physician suicide rate is roughly twice that of the US population in general, and it is even worse for female physicians. A meta-analysis of physician suicide published in the American Journal of psychiatry demonstrated that both male and females physicians are more likely to die by suicide compared to the general population (1.41 times more likely for male physicians and 2.27 times more likely for female physicians).

The US healthcare system is killing physicians.

Students and young Physicians have been documented to be actually more resilient and less depressed than the US average. Then we are subjected to stress, moral distress and trained to ignore the symptoms of depression until it is too late. A study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry demonstrated that the rate of depression among physicians immediately prior to entering internship was 3.9%. During internship, this rate skyrocketed to 25.7%.

Factors contributing to the epidemic of physician suicide include:

  1. Repetitive exposure to death and dying
  2. Exact knowledge of (and ready access to) lethal means
  3. Stigma associated with asking for mental healthcare and
  4. Our profession’s excessive dependence on self-reliance.

While the first two factors above are likely inherent to the profession, the latter two factors driving suicide are amenable to mitigation.

Here are Ten Suggestions for 2019:

  1. Put an end to the silent curriculum (Don’t ask for help. Never show weakness.”) in physician training programs.

Part of the reason physicians don’t ask for help is that in training we were taught the unwritten rule: “Don’t ask for help and never show weakness.”

On my first day of surgical internship, I was naturally a bit apprehensive, given the enormous privilege and responsibility I was about to be given, caring for, and operating on some of the most ill patients in one of the finest academic medical centers in the US. I was shocked and taken aback by the advice the entire group of us surgical interns were given by the senior attending surgeon, tasked with orienting us. He said, “Always remember that while you are here… you are swimming with sharks. So don’t make waves, and if you are bit, don’t bleed.” It is this kind of abusive attitude which I am confident cost one of my female classmates her life, during her surgical residency when she killed herself halfway across the country in another surgical training program.

We must incorporate wellness into both the written (and silent) curriculum.

2. The Physicians need better access to mental health care without fear of punishment for admitting they need help.

Dr. Michell Hardison, a well-respected family doctor in Raleigh NC chose suicide over psychiatric care for his depression. His daughter Anna Hardison Severn revealed, “He was 100% positive that if he came forward and said he needed help that there would be a reprisal of some kind.”

State medical boards are responsible for licensing physicians and protecting the public by ensuring physicians meet high standards. There is nothing wrong with medical boards asking physicians if they have a medical or psychiatric condition which might lower the quality of the care they deliver. They should not however ask if a physician has ever been under the care of a mental health professional. For if they do this, physicians will forgo needed care which could harm the doctor and jeopardize the quality of the care for their patients.

The Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) Workgroup on Physician Wellness and Burnout made 35 recommendations to better address physician burnout. These recommendations should be adopted by all states. They advise against asking probing personal questions regarding a physician’s mental health. The FSMB specifically recommended that state medical boards indicate“it is not only normal but anticipated and acceptable for a physician to feel overwhelmed from time to time and to seek help when appropriate.”

3. Not only should the electronic medical record must be optimized, but processes and systems must be optimized in order to get the most out of this technology and improve user satisfaction.

How it is that healthcare is the only industry where digitization/computerization has decreased worker productivity? The epidemic of physician burnout, driven by administrative hassles, loss of professional autonomy and increasing workloads is contributing to physician burnout, depression and suicide.

It is inexcusable that for every hour physicians spend facing a patient in their office, they are forced to spend two hours tending to desk work and documentation in the electronic medical record.

At UC Davis Medical Health, Scott MacDonald, MD, FACEP demonstrated that by optimizing their electronic medical record’s use, the health system could both dramatically increase physician satisfaction with their EHR and improve their quality of life. They were able to eliminate over 25 hours of unproductive, unnecessary busy work from their physicians’ schedule each month! Imagine how much more time physicians could spend meaningfully caring for their patients and achieving work life balance if this innovation were to be adopted nationwide.

4. Stop the stigma. Employers of physicians, including hospitals, physician groups and residencies must encourage and normalize accessing mental health care.

We must destigmatize and treat physician depression in order to prevent suicide. One study found that access to residency positions was limited for fully qualified students who had requested psychiatric counseling! Only when seeking out a councilor is considered “normal” will physicians ask for help when they need it. All too often, physicians are encouraged to keep vulnerabilities hidden and not ask for help.

5. The practice of requiring medical students and residents to obtain mental health care at their own institution limits confidentiality and should be eliminated.

Until the stigma of obtaining mental health is completely relegated to the ash-bin of history, the confidentiality of accessing such services is critical, particularly for physicians in training. Some student and resident health plans require trainees to obtain healthcare at their own institution, limiting confidentiality for both physical and psychiatric conditions. This paternalistic and antiquated requirement should be eliminated.

6. Peer support should be available at times of great vulnerability:

Medical errors, patient injuries and patient deaths are obviously painful for the patient’s families. Less well understood is the fact that physicians also suffer emotionally in such circumstances, particularly if they believe they have somehow failed their patient and begin to second-guess their own competence.

In times of great stress, such as these or when facing a medical malpractice lawsuit, physicians are extra vulnerable to depression and suicide. It is at these times that confidential peer support, advice from a colleague who has endured the same stressor is most helpful. Employers should plan ahead for such events and offer well-structured and readily available confidential peer to peer support programs to their employed and affiliated physicians.

7. We must accurately keep track of suicide rates by profession. State medical examiners should record the occupation of all suicide victims, including what school they are attending if they are in college or graduate school.

Only then can we identify opportunities for improvement and evaluate whether our interventions are effective in stemming the tide of this horrific slow motion tragedy.

This would capture both the number of physicians / medical students who are committing suicide, and also spotlight any outlier institutions.

8. Postvention: Care for the bystanders after a physician suicide is essential.

Post-suicide counseling and peer support is especially important after a colleague has committed suicide. Toolkits such as the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention’s toolkits are available on line. There is even a toolkit specifically designed for medical schools to utilize after a medical student suicide.

9. Encourage all physicians to select their own trusted primary care physician (and regularly check in with that physician).

All too often physicians follow the dictum, “physician heal thyself.” Employers and affiliated institutions should encourage all medical students, residents and practicing physicians to choose their own trusted primary care physician. In addition to obtaining objective evidence based care from a personal physician, these trusted doctors represent another touch point from which distressed physicians can obtain emotional support.

10. Accessing medical care, whether physical or psychiatric, should be modeled by mentor physicians.

Organizational leaders should model self-care, access mental health care publicly and publicly reinforce the necessity of a healthy work-life balance.

Together we can end the epidemic of physician suicide. Let’s make it happen in 2019.

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Mental health should be treated as part of overall health: An interview with Former US Congressman Patrick Kennedy (Part 1 of a two part series)

As we learned with racial segregation, separate is not equal. Insurance plans should cover all diseases equally.  In America, perhaps due to stigma or prejudice, insurance plans have historically paid more generous benefits to what they called “physical health” as opposed to “mental health” and substance use disorder (addiction) treatment. In medicine, it is often said that behavioral health care is paid the lowest fees, and within behavioral health, the very lowest fees are paid to treat substance use disorder.

In 2008, Former US Representative Patrick Kennedy was a chief sponsor of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA). This bill was signed into law under President George W. Bush, as part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program also know as TARP. Let’s hear what he has to say about parity today:

” When you think you’ve done it, check again. Historical biases and prejudices have a sneaky way of infiltrating our practices.”

Steve Defossez: What can hospitals and health systems do to make sure we finally see full implementation of the 2008 Mental Health Parity Act (the federal parity law)?

Patrick Kennedy: Well, we have to change our cultural predisposition towards these issues. Historically, we segregate mental health issues to the margins of healthcare. Why? because they were not seen as real healthcare issues. Unfortunately that’s the backdrop from which we come. So if I were to emphasize anything, it’s that when you think you’ve done it, check again. Historical biases and prejudices have a sneaky way of infiltrating our practices.

Patrick Kennedy: We don’t know what the future looks like in healthcare delivery because it hasn’t happened yet. We know academically that mental health is essential health and the brain mediates the health of the whole body. We know that you can’t properly treat any illness without treating the mental illness as well, which may underlie it. Mental illnesses often underlie physical diseases. Depression and anxiety are often co-occurring with all other major illnesses and physical disabilities. I would say that we need to start with the parity law because it’s very tangible and easy to wrap our arms around. Ask yourself, are we treating mental health and addiction the same way we treat physical and surgical diseases? Do patients with mental health issues have the same access to inpatient and outpatient care? Is this true for in-network providers and out-of-network providers? Do patients with mental illness have the same pharmacy benefits (coverage and deductibles) and the same ER benefits as patients with “physical disease?”

Patrick Kennedy: The parity law (which requires health insurance plans to pay for mental illness treatments just as it pays for physical illness treatment) is not just for payers. Hospitals are increasingly becoming part of these Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) which are taking on insurance risk. This concept of bifurcating (separating) the payer from the provider; that obviously is quickly becoming a thing of the past.

“Lack of access to mental health care and addiction treatment… is driven by money and the lack of resources.”

Steve Defossez: How does the current system fail to treat behavioral health issues the same as so called, “physical health?”

Patrick Kennedy: One needs to really understand the practices of insurance plans to see the discrimination occurring today. Technical insurance procedures, including:

  • medical necessity determination, (where an insurer can determine that a procedure is not “medically necessary” and therefore not pay for it.)
  • retrospective review (where an insurer can fail to pay for a service which has already taken place)
  • prior authorization (a time consuming hoop physicians need to jump through, in order to get the insurer to approve a service. If the service is performed, even if medically necessary, the insurer will not pay for it unless prior authorization is obtained first.)

These insurance procedures, and others often result in inadequate payment of those who provide mental health services.

This, of course, has led to the historic lack of access to mental health and addiction treatment. By the way, every hospital system and every state is still suffering from lack of access in terms of the inability to really address this public health opioid epidemic. And there is lack of access just to address the day-to-day needs of every patient. All of that is driven by money and the lack of resources that have gone into paying for reimbursement for professionals in mental health. The lack of payment for providers and other ancillary services can actually increase cost and lead to worse outcomes.

Patrick Kennedy: For example, we know stable housing produces as big an impact on stable mental health as anything else you can do on the medical side. We need to do more to provide access to stable housing, and this will be cost effective, as it reduces healthcare costs. We know the science of mental health. It’s not always just biological in terms of its intervention. Social services can be as important as medications. So we need to treat the delivery of mental health services as scientific. If you do that, we can start to move away from this cultural bias among medical staffs and hospitals that this somehow is not what they do. In fact, in order to achieve better outcomes using fewer resources, ACOs need to be thinking about how they address the mental health component of all diseases, whether it’s oncology, cardiovascular disease, diabetes or what have you.

The time for healthcare parity is long overdo. Unless we make it known that our behavioral health benefits are not equal to our physical health benefits, nothing will change, If you experience second class treatment for a behavioral health issue, please contact your state’s insurance commissioner, US representative, US senator or me at Steve@DefoSays.com.

Please be on the lookout for the next and final installment (Part Two) of our two part interview with Former US Representative Patrick Kennedy, where we will address the US opioid crisis.

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Stop the Stigma: Regarding the opioid crisis, there is only “us.” There is no “them.”

It is now understood that some of us, some of you, some of every group have a genetic predisposition to opioid addiction, also known as opioid Substance Use Disorder (SUD). Even exposure to only a few days of certain prescription opioid pain medications can lead to a lifelong addiction to opioids for those of us with this genetic makeup.

You didn’t choose the genetic code written into your chromosomes at the very moment of your conception. Yet it is this karmic destiny which often determines who develops opioid SUD and who does not.

The vast majority of our neighbors with SUD were not led to this condition because they were hopelessly ill, “somehow deranged,” or otherwise “different” from us. These folks are our neighbors, family members, coworkers and friends. They are us.

Over three quarters of heroin addicts had their first exposure to an addictive opioid in the form of a prescription opioid pill. Who has not suffered a traumatic injury, had a tooth extracted, passed a kidney stone, given birth to a child or received a life enhancing joint replacement? For some of us, such routine events, in conjunction with opioid prescriptions, can result in lifelong addiction as surely as night follows day. There but for the grace of God go any of us.

Our graveyards are full of formerly productive students, employees and retirees, who through their own medical prescriptions, developed opioid tolerance, dependence, addiction, overdose and death.

Others in their premature graves first experienced opioids through the bad decision to accept an all-too-available prescription opioid pill from a friend or relative. (Who among us has not made a bad decision?) In the United States, we prescribe 300% to 400% too many opioid pills, which can addict their intended recipients and when diverted, can create new opioid addictions within the public, fueling this horrific epidemic. (Ending opioid over-prescribing will be the subject of a future post.)

Once addicted, patients with SUD become trapped within the vicious cycle of opioid addiction. In time, most patients with SUD are not looking to get high, but rather to stave off the awful symptoms of withdraw, day after terrible day. (What a horrible product; it actually makes its customers physically ill if they don’t keep purchasing the stuff!)

Substance Use Disorder (SUD) is not some kind of moral weakness or a personal failing. It is a chronic physical disease of the brain amenable to successful Medication Assisted Therapy (MAT), just like other chronic physical diseases such as diabetes or hypertension are treatable with medication. We need to make MAT more readily available, as MAT is currently markedly underutilized.

Why should you care? To paraphrase the bipartisan presidential task force upon which former Democratic Congressman Patrick Kennedy and current Republican Governor Charlie Baker just recently served:

Because every American should awaken to this simple fact: If this scourge has not yet found you or your family, without bold action by everyone, it soon will.

Stop the Stigma and please support patient access to Medication Assisted Therapy.

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