Research report
Suicide in doctors: a study of risk according to gender,
seniority and specialty in medical practitioners in England and Wales,
1979-1995
K Hawtona, A Clementsa, C Sakarovitchb, S Simkina, J J Deeksb
a Centre for Suicide
Research, University of Oxford Department of Psychiatry, Warneford
Hospital, Oxford OX3 7JX, UK, b ICRF/NHS Centre for Statistics
in Medicine, Institute of Health Sciences, Oxford
Correspondence to: Professor Hawton (keith.hawton{at}psychiatry.oxford.ac.uk)
Accepted for publication 14 December 2000
STUDY OBJECTIVE
To
investigate the suicide risk of doctors in England and Wales, according
to gender, seniority and specialty.
DESIGN
Retrospective
cohort study. Suicide rates calculated by gender, age, specialty,
seniority and time period. Standardised mortality ratios calculated for
suicide (1991-1995), adjusted for age and sex.
SETTING
England and Wales.
SUBJECTS
Doctors in
the National Health Service who died by suicide between 1979 and 1995, identified by death certificates. Population at risk based on
Department of Health manpower data.
MAIN RESULTS
Two
hundred and twenty three medical practitioners in the National Health
Service who died by suicide or undetermined cause were identified. The
annual suicide rates in male and female doctors were 19.2 and 18.8 per
100 000 respectively. The suicide rate in female doctors was higher
than in the general population (SMR 201.8; 95% CI 99.7, 303.9),
whereas the rate in male doctors was less than that of the general
population (SMR 66.8; 95% CI 46.6, 87.0). The difference between the
mortality ratios of the female and male doctors was statistically
significant (p=0.01), although the absolute suicide risk was similar in
the two genders. There were significant differences between specialties
(p=0.0001), with anaesthetists, community health doctors, general
practitioners and psychiatrists having significantly increased rates
compared with doctors in general hospital medicine. There were no
differences with regard to seniority and time period.
CONCLUSIONS
There is
an increased risk of suicide in female doctors, but male doctors seem
to be at less risk than men in the general population. The excess risk
of suicide in female doctors highlights the need to tackle stress and
mental health problems in doctors more effectively. The risk requires
particular monitoring in the light of the very large increase in the
numbers of women entering medicine.
Keywords: suicide; doctors; medical specialties
© 2001 by Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
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