Thứ Tư, 25 tháng 10, 2017

Waching daily Oct 25 2017

In the School of Public Health and Health Sciences, I was encouraged by professors like Dr.

Frank Rife who through his intellect and his wit and his welcome and presence helped me to keep my eye on the prize

towards graduation, and you know and the classroom

Educators like Professor Van Emmerik pushed us and laid down the foundation of what I will be learning at classroom walls in PT school

And the techniques that we use in the clinics all the way from Chicago

to Columbia. Henry Pierce, a professor of communication disorders,

would frequent my classroom

And he said you're going to go you're gonna come to the University you're going to get a masters degree

You're going to become a speech pathologist

Henry did what he did to get me

Where I was at this point at the University the Jay Melrose work with me. He taught me how to write

The first course that I had enrolled in my sophomore year was introductory environmental health sciences

After that class I knew that I found the field that ignited flame

I knew because I felt an array of emotions every class

I have no idea that one could be so devastated angry hopeful passionate and eager at the same time

I enrolled in nutrition 130 with Claire Norton who is here today

And I'll tell you right now that that was the best decision I've ever made because that class

made me fall in love with nutrition

The science that I've come to love so dearly

This was the turning point when things finally start to have that jolt of emotion that I was looking for

Here is one of the most established scientists of her area believing in me allowing me to join her top-ranked research team as a sophomore

It totally changed my life. I fell in love with UMass. Research has truly changed my life

I've had the privilege to complete my honors thesis here be published in scientific journals attend numerous conferences and build

Everlasting connections with friends faculty lab members being involved in research has allowed me to further myself as a leader

UMass handed me the recipe and I took it and ran and did not look back.

This place has never stopped feeling like home this place has never stopped feeling like family when I think of those two words

home and family it triggers thoughts of love of camaraderie of

support and positivity and

that is what I feel here with you all today on this campus in this place. Because I found a home here in Amherst

On this campus and walls of Chenoweth. I found this incredible community in the kinesiology department the place of passion

potentiality and purpose

Simply as a place of possibilities, and that is what the institution at UMass and the School of Public Health will continue to do

For more infomation >> SPHHS Fall Celebration 2017: Highlight Video - Duration: 2:56.

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Myers Final Video - Duration: 57:41.

It's now my pleasure to introduce

Dr. Michael Myers who will be speaking on

Physician Suicide: What you can do to

save a life. Dr. Myers is a professor of

Clinical Psychiatry and the Immediate

Past Vice Chair of Education and the

Director of Training in the Department

of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at

SUNY Downstate in Brooklyn. Dr. Myers is

a specialist in Physician Health and has

served on the advisory board of the

Center for Physician Health of the

Canadian Medical Association. The section

of Physician Health of the Canadian

Psychiatric Association and the

Committee on Physician Health Illness

and Impairment of the American

Psychiatric Association. Dr. Meyers has

produced an educational videotape for medical students,

physicians, and their families called

Physicians Living with Depression and

his videotape When Physicians Die by

Suicide: Reflections of Those They Leave

Behind, won the 1999 APA Psychiatric

Services Award. With no further ado Dr.

Myers. I almost walked into that..

Hi good afternoon everybody. Thanks for staying

around. It's a delight to follow Dr.

Nemiroff

because he's really set this up very

nicely for some of the slides that I'll

be presenting and you'll get a chance to

see those in just a moment.

This is my disclosure slide. I do two to

three lectures a year for this

organization. This year I think it will

be much less, sort of thing, so it's not a

lot. So the learning objectives you have

with you I want to spend just a moment

with these because there's some of you

may have stayed for this talk because

you're kind of concerned about maybe

what we can do better as clinicians when

we look after physicians which is true

that's going to be part of this talk but

also to quote Dr. David Satcher the

former US Surgeon General, "suicide

prevention is everyone's business".

And I don't know about you but there are

many physicians who actually are sort of

were in our midst who were never

patients of ours but who have ended

their lives and some of the some of us

are kind of left to wonder, is there

anything that we might have done as

their friend or as their boss or as

their student or something like that? I'm

going to touch on those things today.

So these so I'm going to set this up by

kind of going over some general things

and then talk about the ways in which we

can actually actually save a life even

if we're not the clinician looking after

a physician. And I want to talk about

some new knowledge and state-of-the-art

things we have and also talk about a

skill set which will be helpful. So in

terms of this slide addressing the need

I wanted to just again spend a little

bit on these bulleted points. That first

point is that this is something that

I've known for a long time that our non

psychiatric medical colleagues are

really anxious to have information from

us and as you know we're living in an

age of burnout. We haven't really talked

about that much today but you know the

ballpark figure is roughly 50% of U.S.

physicians suffer from burnout, it's

probably the same around the world

actually. So but they're interested in

information I'm going to talk about ways

later that we can provide that.

Now the second bullet I want to tell you

about a project that I've been doing and

I've been working on it's ongoing I

started it in January of 2014

and the preliminary data from this study

I've actually put in the form of a book

that was just released yesterday called

Why Physicians Died by Suicide: Lessons

Learned from Their Families, Those Who

Care About Them. It's available on Amazon

and the reason I did this is because

what I've been learning in these

interviews is quite profound. At the

moment I've interviewed approximately 75

individuals and and they and this is

with regard to 45 physicians who have

died by suicide, the people I've been

interviewing are family members of

doctors who have died but I haven't

ended it there I've interviewed friends

and medical colleagues of doctors, nurses

who have worked with them, I've

interviewed training directors who have

lost residents and fellows to suicide,

I've interviewed medical students who

have lost professors to suicide, I've

interviewed psychiatrists and other

mental health professionals who have

lost doctor patients to suicide and

finally I've interviewed patients who

have lost their doctor to suicide so

it's quite a it's quite a diverse base

of individuals it's a quantitative study

I saw a qualitative study and so it's

basically semi-structured interviews

many of these interviews I've done in

person but because some of them are far

away because people I've interviewed are

not just here in this country but also

in Canada the UK and Australia, I've

interviewed them by telephone. So that's

kind of the database where I'm coming

from there's one thing that really

stands out from these grieving people

and that is there's a cohort of

physicians out there who have never

received any care at all, nada, nothing.

They have gone to no one, they've gone to

no primary care physician, they haven't

gone to a counselor or a therapist in

private practice, a non-medical person

they certainly haven't gone through a

psychiatrist, they don't have a primary

care physician and they've gone from wellness

to illness to death without any care and

I was quite shocked about this finding

because we tend to know about the ones

who actually did perhaps knock on our

doors and we looked after them for a

while or somebody else did so they

received some type of treatment and then

died by suicide. But to know that there

are a significant number of doctors out

there who have received no treatment at

all I think is unprecedented because you

know we have a tendency to delay going

to our physicians for help when we

notice things in ourselves but yet my

colleagues who work in urology or in

oncology

yes they'll say that this woman doctor

waited a while to kind of go on

have that breast mass looked at or same

my urology colleagues would say that

about somebody with prostatic CA but yet

they've come but yet to know that there

are physicians who have gone to no one I

think is really quite alarming it's been

actually devastating for their families

and this is part of the driver for this

continuing research that I'm doing

because these families are very bereft

and really wants something to change in

the world of medicine that we that will

make it easier for doctors to actually

go for help the third bullet has to do

with with request for an enhanced

skillset that when you're actually

looking after physicians for I think it

was 21 years I taught a course each year

with my colleague dr. Leah deck stain

called treating medical students and

physicians at the annual meeting va PA

we no longer do that but I'm still doing

some form of this and my colleague and

co-author Glenn Gabbard and I have put

together a workshop for a PA this coming

spring in San Diego and we've called it

critical issues in the treatment of

suicidal physicians because we really

wanted to hone down in some of the

specifics so that's the background to

all of this is dr. Nemiroff mentioned in

these are old data because since I made

this slide the figure is over 44,000

Americans died by suicide in 2014 and

it's continuing to go up over the last

12 years so when it comes to doctors

though the ballpark figures at 3 to 400

physicians die by suicide each year in

the United States we don't have data

from other countries that's a doctor a

day that we lose to suicide there's a

gender difference the suicide rates a

little bit higher for men and medicine

and quite a bit higher for women and

medicine compared to their gender and

it's believed that 85 to 90% of people

who kill themselves of a psychiatric

illness and we feel that that applies to

physicians as well now these these are

some old figures from a publication a

book chapter the dr. Silverman

wrote his a suicide ologist psychiatrist

so those are the most common things that

we see in physicians and then I decided

to update this over the last while and I

put burnout in there because there are

doctors who do die from burnout by

suicide and so I've added some things

that fit nicely with dsm-5 especially

substance medication induced depressive

disorder because of the vast number of

physicians who self-medicate traumatic

stress disorder and I'm glad that dr.

Nemiroff talked about this as well

because we're seeing this much more

commonly in physicians than we ever did

and I think that's partly because we're

looking for it as well and we know what

to look for but it is complicated and

tough to treat as he mentioned other

personality disorders in double

depression complicated ones in the

comorbid conditions I'm sure that many

of you who are not necessarily looking

after physicians the core mitad

comorbidity and so many of your patients

and that exists and we in us as

physicians ourselves from where we come

out so the first ones very common but

anxiety disorder that complements it

complicates progressive medical

disorders and bipolar illness and

personality disorders etc etc and don't

forget that adjustment daughters

adjustment disorders can kill as well

with overwhelming stress okay so

previous history of a depressive episode

I wanted to just run through some of

these things that are considered high

risk in all of our patients but to tell

you though that sometimes it's hard to

get this information from a new

physician who is sitting office at you

and if that individual continues to see

you you may then get sort of more

accurate and authentic data as the

therapeutic alliance builds in the same

way with previous suicide attempts I

think that we mustn't forget that

there's a lot of embarrassment in shame

and guilt that's attached to previous

suicide attempts and it's especially

high in doctors who have attempted

suicide and by the way we do stand out

as a group of individuals who are known

to have a lower incidence of attempted

suicide

I and then and to end up completing

suicide but now that I think about some

of those factors I think it's that we're

probably not getting accurate answers

because it's just not easy to talk about

okay so that may come out down the road

I've seen that so much in my own private

practice the family history of mood

disorders and suicide like I know that

this is kind of suicide elegy 101 but he

gets particularly tricky when you're

looking after a physician who's sitting

opposite you and is kind of scared and

it's not going to be easy for him or her

to talk about this stuff sometimes in

the first visit we know about the other

things lawsuits investigation to medical

licensure and poor treatment adherence

which is very very common and I'm going

to talk more about that because most of

it is rooted in stigma and then

treatment refractory psychiatric illness

I want to tell you with regard to the

ladder it really troubles me at times

the number of physicians who are being

treated by a generalist

in the physician the patient is not

doing well and the the physician patient

has not been referred for a second

opinion and has never been referred to a

psychopharmacologist and I think that's

extremely important that that be done

because you know how difficult many of

your patients can be and it's important

to have that expertise as well and I do

feel that physician patients well what

will welcome that even if they have to

travel 200 mile miles you know to the

nearby treatment center at an academic

center we've been hearing a lot this

afternoon about undiagnosed and

untreated bipolar illness we have to

always keep that in the back of our

minds as well in our unipolar physician

patients and the rapid cycling patients

as well in next mood disorders and

affective states so those are really

important things that can kind of make

our patients ill very quickly our doctor

patients comorbid conditions that I

touched on impulsivity and sometimes

with a good longitudinal history you'll

be able to see that this is a man or a

woman who actually had a lot of

impulsive behavior going way back to

their childhood or if there could be an

untreated and unrecognized attention

deficit disorder as well

in unrecognized emergent psychosis when

I think of some of the physicians who

become dangerously suicidal there's

something going on that is is very scary

in those final hours or days of their

life that is driving them to do

something so precipitous the other the

next bullet is is important as well the

severe sleep deprivation especially in

some training programs that do require a

lot of shift change it's not unusual

that some emergency physicians if

they're closely evaluated by a sleep

disorder specialist and have found

actually to have a primary sleep

disorder and combined with a mood

disorder that they will not be able to

continue to do shift work so that's

where we may become involved in that

regard but it also involves physicians

too who you find are actually quite

stable in their mood disorder and yet

then they make major circadian rhythm

changes as they travel around the world

so to giving talks or things like that

and they report mood slippage that

occurs as well and they have to be

recognized and treated appropriately so

now the last one I'm not sure how many

of you might have heard of this

diagnosis it's kind of an emerging

possibility for a dsm-5 revision and

this comes out of the Vuitton joiner

group I'll have a slide about his work

in just a moment but it's very serious

and I think it warrants more

consideration because of its acuteness

and basically what you see is an

individual becoming dangerously suicidal

within minutes and hours and the

families note this and I think that we

have to pay very close attention to this

it's usually in an agitated state with

severe insomnia and also convictions

which I believe are either overvalued

ideas or bordering on delusions that

they are completely untreatable and

hopeless that sort of thing you can't

reason with them so in why this gets

really important is because there's kind

of a myth out there that because the

person is a physician that maybe you

should be able to reason with them but

any of you who have looked after very

ill physicians will know

that we're no different than anyone else

when we get into that kind of a state

the fact that we know how to kill

ourselves has been long considered a

risk factor for us and this accounts for

higher suicide rates in physicians

although not all doctors who die by

suicide use a medical means to end their

lives but if you ask carefully in your

Mental Status examination of your

patients about suicidal planning you'll

get some if they trust you you'll get

some pretty important answers we do have

access to means and I believe that

medical students actually learn how to

kill themselves pretty early in medical

training and this is where probably many

of you note have noticed that the jokes

that are sometimes told in our emergency

rooms in the presence of medical

students and physicians are no longer

funny this obviously is lack humor but

still existed very scary so medical

students learn about the toxicology and

the availability of certain prescribed

and street drugs that indeed do kill

with regard to stigma I touched on that

earlier and I say this quite strongly

that stigma kills any of you who follow

my blog on psych Congress will know that

I've written many different articles on

stigma in physicians and how it is very

very permit pernicious and again that

came out a lot of my qualitative

interviews with family members of

doctors as well of how much stigma was

sort of causing problems in their loved

one receiving accurate and I think very

good care and then of course don't

forget any of you

those of you in the audience who are

indeed physician slash psychiatrists who

look after other physicians we must

always be mindful of the main many

transference and countertransference

issues that are going on when we treat

our own that's sort of thing and I won't

go into details and perhaps there'll be

some questions about that in the in the

question and answer period

so here's a story from my own practice

my dad never really stuck to the

treatment you provided for him dr.

Meyers he just hated being a patient he

felt so ashamed I tried hard too but

even my support wasn't enough this is

the medical students son of my patient a

psychiatrist who killed himself and he

came up to me and Iraqi I came up to him

because I had met him in a family visit

at the memorial service of my patient

that's an example I think of the stigma

internalized stigma that my psychiatrist

patient was living with and by the way

because you are not an audience of

mental health professionals don't forget

that despite the fact that we work we

were were drawn to mental illness and

psychiatry and in that that we don't

always fully purge ourselves as stigma

though even through our careers we do

this work every day but it's not unusual

for us to have residual internalized

stigma in ourselves and that accounts

for the fact that when and if we fall

ill ourselves we can be extremely hard

on ourselves in terms of the secondary

effects or why sometimes we can be

judgmental of other mental health

professionals who are living with

psychiatric conditions explains a lot

and stigma is extremely important what

about the culture of Medicine we know

what medical school of course it's come

a long ways that's a lot better and

that's why these adjectives that I'd

used here are quite they're quite bold

actually but in the other hand they

haven't quite gone away and that's why I

used things like unforgiving praise

deficient bullying because some trainees

will respond to that that they do feel

bullied I've been appointed the

Ombudsman for our medical school for our

medical students by the former dean so I

investigate all of the complaints that

our medical students have about abusive

behavior toward them in their medical

training so look at the personality

variables as you know we're a very you

know

eclectic group of people who study

medicine but so I just lifted some of

those things which are kind of at one

level nonspecific but in various

constellations though they can really be

contributing factors to desperate

thinking that type of thing to just pick

one of those out there I would choose

probably the first one perfectionism

which we know so much about but it's

very important sometimes any of you who

are doing psychotherapy with physicians

with somebody like this to make sure

that you you help them with what you

what appears to you as excessive

perfectionism because as you know it's a

mixed bag it's perfectionism that gets

within to medical school and into plum

residences but on the other hand it can

be our undoing as well because we just

are too hard on ourselves and that gets

hypertrophied when we're ill so ok this

is a woman I interviewed who wanted to

remain anonymous in the loss of her

brother he was a 33 year old fellow who

had completed his residency and now

moved to another place to do his

fellowship and so this is how she

described him and I'll let you read that

but what I what this is a category that

I put in my book and these are these

superstars in medicine these are the

ones that you least expect would ever

kill themselves I mean for some people

it's shocking that any physician would

kill himself or kill herself but there

are these superstars that we are all

shocked about in their cohort that we

don't know a lot about but that's

basically how she described her brother

who had died who died very precipitously

the only thing is that she felt you

might have sunk into an acute depression

that's the third line from the bottom a

case went badly his judgment was

criticized and there was no support no

safety net for him you know we all look

on a suicidal act of course as being

multifactorial and that's going to come

up in another slide but yet there could

be times actually when maybe not

everybody is

instead of a multi-modal situation that

leads to their suicide and this is a

woman I or I interviewed she's a

physician herself her father was a

physician and she herself has suffered

from depression but she basically is

talking about the culture of medicine

and there are many others out there who

said this that you know we we tend

toward altruism in this sort of thing so

if we put ourselves first and I know

this is put in a rather concrete way it

can seem as if then we're letting our

patients and colleagues down and she

feels strongly and so we make changes in

the culture that we're going to have a

lot of difficulty saving physician lives

and this is one of the approaches of

course that we have to take but somehow

changing the culture of medicine and

you'll get some ideas toward the end of

this talk this is the work of Thomas

joiner who is a psychologist his work is

extremely important and this is a triad

that he describes to precede

burdensomeness okay so we know this and

our patients who are quite depressed

when I see it in my physician patients

it's when they have that sort of sense

of really being a burden on their family

and feel that they're no longer really

serving any sort of a purpose and you

would know that the failed belongingness

really resonates with me those are the

physician patients I've looked after who

in the midst of treatment say don't call

me dr. Smith anymore my name is mr.

Smith so they have removed themselves

from the medical field because they

don't feel that they belong any longer

that because they're no longer working I

have them on extended medical leave that

they're no longer a physician they don't

and that's the unworthiness that that

illa physicians feel and the third one

is extremely important the so called

learned fearlessness that these are

these are patients who really aren't

afraid of death it could be a

philosophical attitude that they have

could be their life stage or they're

just not really very afraid and but it

can heighten their

their risk of a suicide attempt

so dr. joiner goes on and this is from

his book the kind of exposure to pain

and fear that people also might learn

through such experiences as mountain

climbing

well lots of physicians mountain climb

performing surgery a lot of physicians

do surgery fighting in Wars we have a

whole sort of military cohort of

physicians are being afflicted with

anorexia some physicians of eating

disorders so what he's getting at there

are these individuals who maybe been

flirted with that or doctors who also

look after a lot of people with massive

injuries and that he felt he feels that

some of them are actually sort of not so

afraid of death themselves and so he has

particularly singled our surgeons in

this regard and he's got some work going

on it but specifically with trauma

surgeons because of the work that they

do in August of 2014 in New York City

you may have heard of this two interns

died by suicide within four days of each

other and so there was a kind of

universal response among all of our

medical centers in the city and then

very recently afterwards and in the New

York Times what this was this piece by

an intern dr. Sinha which I read and I

was immediately captivated by this

because it was an op-ed piece it was so

timely that he did this and it was

basically really about very basic things

that need to change in our training

programs and the culture of medicine and

he really put it I felt very poignant

lady he was an intern at Yale at the

time and so I stayed up all night to

prepare a letter to the editor which

fortunately was published and that's

just an excerpt from it because I was

very grateful for this young man I

saluted his initiative but I felt that

we need you to go further so this is an

appeal to all of us who are supervisors

and mentors of these young doctors that

we need to set an example because we

don't do that enough that's why I said

we need to share our insecurities

because very often supervisors don't do

that and unmask what I called our

humanity this includes disclosing our

own psychiatric treatment well that sort

of went over like a lead balloon and

then I quote this kind of intimacy and I

use that word very strongly because it

is intimate when an if a supervisor

discloses his or her own struggles with

a psychiatric illness with their

trainees as those people who do with the

general public they make very courageous

decisions I called it intimacy I also

call it call it loving kindness it

creates kind of a loving-kindness type

of treat of a supervisory dyad that

basically the messenger giving is we

care about you in this four four year

program we don't want you to do anything

to harm yourself

that's the kinds of messaging that I'd

like to get out there this slide may be

familiar to some of you and it's it's a

bear meant to built on that's why that

notion we do so much with our people who

we train

certainly the part of the predisposing

and precipitating factors and then

perpetuating factors and protective

factors if you look over to the left of

course you see all the biological

factors that put people at risk and

we've been hearing a lot about that

today

then the predisposing factors those are

the diagnosis and also down at the

bottom of the severe medical

neurological illnesses and then we get

over to the proximal factors as we work

our way right and these are the

dangerous things that can precipitate

then a suicide attempt in our patients

and so that's why we need to really kind

of pay attention to all of these these

as I could say a multifactorial thing

that's coming together that really so

there's a last straw the last straw

could be public humiliation or shame and

that's when for instance a physician

who's in trouble with Medicaid fraud or

having sex with his or her patients or

something then there's sort of a media

release of that and what that does not

just to the physician but to the family

and to the neighbors and things like

that that can be very familiar and

defeat and worsening prognosis and I'm

glad so that when doctor

Nemiroff talked about

treatment-resistant depression and

that's also when our physician patients

give up that they feel they're not

getting better you read you really need

a very hopeful psychiatrist looking

after you or a team that's looking after

you and say look at yes this is tough

but we're going to get through this

that's all the background here's what

you can do to educate your colleagues

okay you can offer to give a Grand

Rounds at your medical center on

physician burnout and depression trust

me if nobody else is doing it locally

please give some thought to this they

really want this kind of information you

can do in services you can write pieces

you can the local CNE planning committee

bring in speakers who will talk about

burnout or talk about the sort of

interface between burnout and

psychiatric disorders and doctors you

may be the best qualified to do that

and is usually a physician wellness

program as well they're springing up all

over the country and beyond so you could

get involved in that you can volunteer

to serve on your state's physician

health program one of the problems with

many of our state physician health

programs and it's that I was in Canada

for many years physician health programs

and our provinces as well is we don't

have enough psychiatric expertise so

that's another error or way that you can

get involved this is all part of my

subtitle what we can do to save a life

in resources that we can put together

that we can educate our colleagues this

is dr. peggy watanabe who is a retired

gynecologist at indiana university she

lost her husband august Gus to suicide I

didn't want other people to go through

what I've been to I know so much more

now since Gus was sick we need to learn

more about this about depression we got

to talk about it more Peggy has felt

she's very committed to this that they

bring in more resources to educate

non-safe at non psychiatrists in

medicine about what what to look for in

our colleagues that could mean if that

individual is slipping into a depression

she's a wonderful woman as a I've

interviewed her two sons

well now getting into the treatment

program what you're looking for of

course is the suspicion I call it

suspicion of suicidal thinking and

planning because it may not come out and

please don't be sort of seduced by

somebody who seems squeaky clean on the

area of suicide elegy that individual

could be just not sharing it with you

yet you've got to do a very artful

that's why I use the word artful because

this is not as you know a checklist and

it's not just a suicide risk assessment

but it's a formulation of your patient

and that's where you will use your

clinical expertise from my medical legal

work that I've been doing in the

aftermath of suicide documentation is

absolutely essential it must be done

very carefully and in a timely manner

ask about stockpiled meds even the ones

that you're prescribing I don't know how

many patients I'd looked after that I

assumed that they were responding to the

SSRI or SNRI or whatever only for them

to come out of the closet six months

down the road that they not once took

one of the pills that I prescribed for

them so they got better but they were

embarrassed to tell me that they had not

taken now fortunately these were not

people who were stockpiling medication

to kill themselves but it's important to

find out whether or not your doctor

patient could be doing that as you know

you can get anything over the Internet

they could be purchasing toxic meds over

the internet and when we hospitalized

and if we have to hospitalized a

physician it's strictly for safety and

if you're not sure get a second opinion

because it can be life-saving but if you

inappropriately certify or hospitalized

a physician say against three wishes you

could turn them off psychiatry for the

rest of their lives so that's why it's

got to be a very careful decision to

make sure that you're not just panicking

and that you're worried about some sort

of medical legal risk when actually this

is really about saving a life I have

found that there are so many physicians

out there with a lot of suicidal

thinking they're really welcome you to

go into that dark place with them and

you feel so much better afterwards when

you do that

and they're glad that you haven't

panicked in forced them into the

hospital because you know we have to

look after a certain number of suicidal

patients on an ambulatory basis anyway

so for them to be able to kind of share

these scary thoughts and plans with

somebody is greatly relieving and it

will also enhance your therapeutic

alliance the last bullet of course is

important that's the close follow-up

after discharge because of the risk of

suicide for anyone who are in those

early days and weeks of discharged from

an inpatient unit now obtaining old

records extremely important and you're

going to get pushback from some doctor

patients they don't want you to do that

you're going to have to find out why and

get those old records because there

could be a ton of stuff about what other

treating professionals have diagnosed

the person with that they haven't told

you about because they just either don't

want to or don't trust you or whatever

that information is extremely important

and the way I do that oh by the way and

the way if the records are no longer

available because of the duration of

time then get the names of that treating

professional and call them if they've

retired you may be out of luck so in

what I use to kind of to push through

the pushback that I get from dr.

patients is I use that old the untitled

canard in medical training that we've

been taught since we were first or

second-year medical students that old

records are absolutely pivotal so that's

why it's extremely important you can use

that on your patients that this is about

you wanting to be extremely thorough in

your assessment in care of this doctor

and that's how they will then give you

consent as I said earlier get second or

third opinions work closely with a

physician health program and don't

forget that we're trained in and we must

apply a biopsychosocial treatment model

with our patients now these are the

words of Dave M Sanders a paleontologist

he lost his wife who was a psychiatrist

and his young daughter Freya to this is

what they call it in the UK extended

suicide where she took her baby's life

in a psychotic depression she was had

bipolar illness and he lost both of them

I interviewed David in the fall when I

was in London and he's working very hard

in the UK with the British Medical

Association and the so called Sikh

doctors program there to kind of get

families involved and you can read this

later when you get more time but he

believed very strongly that we have to

be involving our family members of our

doctors and their cared he calls them

carers unofficial carers we have to

think more about involving family

members split treatment in general is

very common in the United States very

important and again I'm thinking medical

legally that everything be charted in

close communication between you and the

co treater

so if you're the psychiatrist you're

then agree to be treating with

communicating with the therapist or vice

versa if you're the therapist be

communicating with the psychiatrist

who's prescribing especially any changes

that are going on in either one of your

offices with regard to this patient it's

very important and that's really not

only safe treatment but it's also very

important from a standpoint of meeting

the standard of care and again we have

to watch for things that could emerge

and I put substance use disorders there

because I can be a very important

comorbid condition again just to

remember the transference and

countertransference issues don't forget

that actually who you've got obviously

it was a hurting individual who just

happens to be a physician it's very

important that you not change your

standard of care that you would use in

all of your patients who are not

physicians okay it's very very important

because you can be seduced and also

don't forget these very important

suicide specific forms of therapies

they're all based in CBT principles

including DBT but as well as cams

there's a lot of research going on

collaborative assessment and management

of suicidality it works very nicely with

physicians by the way all three of those

do again it's just an alert to the

dangerous symptoms that you could get

your approach has to be kind and

compassionate remember we're colleagues

that sort of thing but you're also going

to have to be firm and parental at times

and that there's a lot of terror and

shame that could lurk behind those

symptomatic behavior can't rely just on

the self-report if there's no suicidal

thinking that does not mean that they're

not at risk you know this that the

majority of patients who die by suicide

have been squeaky clean on the last

suicide risk assessment and recent

research shows that passive suicidal

thinking is no less risky than active

suicidal thinking so that's very

important to know and then the last part

is really basic medicine these are the

words of a physician who I interviewed

for the videotape that was mentioned

when physicians died by suicide he's a

physician himself his brother was a

psychiatrist this is what he said

psychiatrist should double their

compassion but double their skepticism

and what he means is is that we have to

be careful that we may not be getting

the full story Kay Jamison I thought of

her earlier when actually dr. Nemiroff

was talking because of the fact that she

has written so eloquently not just a

better bipolar illness but it but mixed

mood states as well but the last part is

very important about competence because

we don't have those same sorts of things

like they have an oncology or in cardiac

disease and grading things and that's

why it's very important that we really

do all of those things too with a with

regard to our patients that competence

is extremely important so here's how

things are changing there's a lot going

on by the way at the Association of

American Medical Colleges and I'm quite

active with the Accreditation Council of

Graduate Medical Education there have

been two symposia sand those interns

died by suicide there's going to be a

whole new program that's being rolled

out to kind of keep our residents and

fellows safe apps for CBT for

suicidal interns burnout prevention

strategies are being rolled out a lot of

this stuff is emanating from the Mayo

Clinic which is doing the best and the

biggest evidence-based research on

depression in burnout in physicians in

the world and those last three things

are all first-person accounts dr. leslie

dr. Miller and dr. Carroll all going

public with their psychiatric illnesses

now I want to close by telling you about

your another way that you can save lives

is after a doctor dies by suicide

because you may be the only one in the

medical community with expertise and

I've had a lot of experience in being

sort of parachuted into into your

community where doctors died by suicide

and the whole medical community is

grieving and so there's a lot that you

can do there to help them as they get

through this and be prepared for very

raw emotions and there's all a full

range of mourning and medical colleagues

a lot of contagion fears who's going to

be next in this small medical community

a lot of guilt and blame that they feel

that the individual was maybe either you

know asking but we didn't see it that

kind of thing a lot of this is second

guessing after suicide it's not uncommon

that you can reassure them about that

and then anger and rage that the

deceased I've heard absolutely

everything about this that they're angry

at the person for killing himself

because now I have to look after all of

her patients and I'm already have burned

up myself so these are not irrational

but if you create a nice sort of safe

milieu for doctors to talk they will get

at these very primitive and raw emotions

and then the last one of course are the

ones that are using maybe it's

association maybe it's just the

characteristic defenses that we use of

intellectualization that it's like

suicide is just an occupational hazard

when you're a doctor it's the same thing

as people say like shit happens

you know these things it's a way of kind

of shielding themselves I think from the

profound emotions

a colleague dies by suicide so you've

got to be welcoming make sure that you

push confidentiality it's very very

important that people feel is that it's

safe it's like an AAA meeting you know

where they can really say things that

won't go outside this room try not to

judge because this stuff can be pretty

powerful human beings first you were

back to the same thing that we're all

human beings first who just happened to

be physicians very many different stages

of grief and answer questions for them

dr. Gabbard and I have written a lot

about this in the past okay they'll have

a lot of questions for you it's very

important though that you be a group

facilitator okay that you don't just

sort of give them a mini lecture on

physician suicide or something that

won't go over well postvention is

prevention for the next generation so

we're doing a lot when we do something

like that if we take care of ourselves

and accept the painful reality of

physicians suicide we reach out to those

left behind I think we really are making

a difference see historically physician

suicide has been kind of swept under the

carpet we haven't talked about it that

sort of thing we're doing it more now

that's why I wrote that book because I

really wanted it to be front and center

out there some people feel we shouldn't

be talking about this there we're going

to scare our patients we're going to

scare the general public and they won't

want to come to us because they think

doctors are at risk I see it the other

way around

you become a change agent someone who's

a part of the movement to stop doctors

from killing themselves those are the

references they're all listed there and

that's my appreciation slides I mean

it's very seriously I feel very grateful

to these individuals whom I've

interviewed who sort of let me into

their hearts and their homes actually to

talk about a very painful subject

because I feel like their envoy as well

and that sort of in part why I'm here

today is sort of the spokesperson for

them I bear witness actually to their

pain and grief in losing

physician log run in their homes I want

to thank all of you for coming and being

here today

these are insights I hope that you can

take home with you because there may be

colleagues where you work will say you

know what did you do with that

conference in Las Vegas you know what

were some of the things that you learned

about or whatever so that maybe there's

something that you can do back in your

home communities and of course I honor

the positions who what I would call have

had tragically interrupted lives and

they have certainly informed this work

so thank you very much I appreciate your

attention thank you very much I was a

very very good thank you very poignant

talk I do have a lot of questions

particularly regarding some of the

stigma in regarding reporting Raza a lot

of concern about what needs to be

reported what are responsibilities what

legally we may be required to report and

even what we have to self-report on

licensing applications for example last

year have you ever been treated for yeah

ok a good question big question and it's

a universal question there's a lot going

on right now because it isn't working I

mentioned that my involvement with the

ACGME by the way there are reaches is

going way beyond trainees it's going

their liaison with the federation of

state physician health programs and with

the federation of state medical boards

these blanket questions have to change

in some states they actually are in

violation of the Americans with

Disability Act and so these things are

very serious because what could be more

terrifying than have to exploit to

disclose so you know a blanket question

so actually the ideal question and this

has been around for so long and some of

the or I want to believe that most

medical boards have have come on to the

ideal question is supposed to be

something like this in the past year

it's finite in the past year or two

years had you suffered from

any illness that is necessitated your

taking time away from your studies or

from your practice and if so please

explain because see medical birds are

feeling that they have a right to ask

that just in case something could recur

that sort of thing

but you can see that question is still

going to kind of you know it's still

going to have to identify some people

but there's so many others who would be

able to say no to that question so in

but then even if you say yes and that's

got to be done very humanely because

these things are done sometimes so

bureaucratically if people don't realize

you know what a tender subject that is

and we know because sometimes people are

afraid to go for care that lets certify

so that's just one example of some of

the questions it's the same thing with

disability insurance and if we lose

those you know the clauses that that

don't penalize you for having

pre-existing conditions there were going

to be back right where we were seven or

eight or nine years ago so they're all

things that really have we all have to

keep working on sort of at a systemic

level but they are very very real issues

we're human human beings and the final

thing I want to say on this I mentioned

Dave Emerson he sent me a wonderful

piece of what is actually going on with

the national initiative in the UK that

there are many physicians who are

realizing I need to just be more

transparent and they're just they're

just doing that in the next going a long

ways to reduce thing or eradicating the

stigma in the House of Medicine we still

have we still have a ways to go I was

asked to clarify if you could speak a

little bit more on you spoke about

passive suicidal ideation being as

important an indicator and kind of

active sua sterilization and certainly

my understanding is passive suicidal

ideation kind of indicates there's no

real plan or intent right yeah that's

right and so I think why that has been

found to be just as pernicious for

instance if somebody says well yeah I

mean you know if I when I leave your

office today if I get run over by a bus

that would be okay but am I thinking

you're killing myself no

and I don't have a plan this order so

you know if you look at some of the

interviews that I've looked at by for

instance the people who are working with

individual suicides specifically the

following question will be I'm surprised

that you're not having thoughts of

suicide see many of us weren't trained

that way because we felt that's kind of

intrusive but that's kind of provocative

or whatever but again if it's done in a

caring way you're sort of saying given

how ill you felt so the person might say

yeah one of a kind of surprise - I don't

know I just been one of those people who

does and you as we know not all severely

depressed people do have suicidal

thinking so it may actually be true this

individual doesn't but the individual

might be able to say well well it was

sort of but not real eh okay let's let's

kind of go there if you're comfortable

with it obviously you're going to make

them feel more comfortable but it goes

back to the old business of a importance

of just clinical intuition and doing say

if you've done a very careful Mental

Status examination and yet the suicide

part is pristine and yet there's so much

other stuff there that makes you feel

that this person's at high risk well

that's going to be addressed because

that's going to be somebody you're going

to want to hold on to if they're in the

emergency room you will not want to let

them out by the way the one final thing

is that there are a number of physicians

out there now who've gone public

including psychiatrists with their own

history of suicidality and some of them

are in our training programs and they're

very good with our residents because

they just administered look at I lied

like crazy to my psychiatrist when I

attempted suicide I'm so glad I didn't

die of my suicide attempt I finished my

residency and now here I am so when you

hear those kinds of first-hand

first-person accounts it's very humbling

I think it really makes us reflect and

think that it's all about I think

carving out a very kind of

safe mutually respectful relationship so

that the person can say I have felt very

much like that revisiting the issue of

stigma many of us work in more rural

kind of communities or small communities

I think there's a fear that a couple of

people have expressed about getting

treatment going to a clinic running into

your own patients are being hospitalized

and everybody kind of know what you're

you're very intimate history is yes can

you speak to what fictions might be

available for yeah yeah and I think they

vary a lot with the individual and even

with the rural town and and if I could

use just a little bit of humor on this

when I practice in Vancouver for many

years and many of you will know that

it's a large City at the bottom of the

province but it wouldn't be unusual for

me to see in consultation positions from

the rural north that sort of thing but

there was one time actually would I get

in realize it because I always tried to

make sure that any new patients who

might know each other we're not back to

back but what happened was that these

two individuals had actually come from

the very same small town and all had

first appointments with me on a Friday

afternoon one at two o'clock and one at

3 o'clock and they bumped into each

other in the waiting and so there was a

moment of shock like oh my god I mean it

turned out to be fine but at first they

felt extremely exposed with that sort of

thing but it's an example though of at

least going down for an initial

assessment and then some of the

follow-up I would do by telemedicine and

that's what you do need to do I mean we

know that telepsychiatry is going on in

a lot of areas so that's the one thing

the other thing too is that you can also

though get sometimes some very good sort

of psychotherapy from somebody who's

maybe sort of in your community you may

even refer patients to that person but

yet they're not in your kind of medical

circle you're not necessarily running

into them at the hospital or in the

clinic or something so you can get

really good care there as well or if not

thing it's it's the next community so

but those are those are some of the some

of the doable things and especially to

when people are really high profile

that they really want to go to another

medical center and that would happen I

found with some people I would see who

would come to see me in consultation

from say Washington State or from the

next province over Alberta but however

what I found though is that if many of

them began to improve a lot of that

stigma dropped away and they were no

longer so nervous about seeing somebody

locally in their community here and some

of them had even disclosed in the

workplace that they were undergoing

treatment for depression and so it says

something I think about us as well that

if we get feeling better and we feel

grateful for that then we just speak

about it and the person I think to look

at in this regard is dr. kay Jamison

she's a psychologist but she said she

couldn't live with herself anymore she

just felt so fraudulent and so that's

why she had to come out she had to tell

her story that she indeed was diagnosed

with who was living with bipolar illness

she writes about it very eloquently and

she lost some colleagues through that

they felt that she should have done that

most saluted her she's phenomenal as we

know could you speak to the prevalence

and some of the risks about prescribing

for ourselves and a depressants for

example the family members friends in an

effort to help but yeah it's probably

most complicated when we when we

self-medicate and I think what I've seen

in so many physicians are like the easy

call is dr. axe he called and so dr.

Meyers my name is dr. X

I mean feeling kind of depressed lately

I thought it might be depressing so I

put myself on an antidepressant I'm

feeling a lot better now but I don't

want to be one of those doctors who

treats themselves will you take over my

care list ed of course and I meet with

them that sort of stuff so those are the

easy ones when it's more complicated

though it's when doctors then can't tell

whether or not they need to up the

medication or maybe even lower the

medication because they're trying to

sort out side-effects from sort of

untreated symptoms and then they might

decide maybe I should switch to another

drug because the pharmaceutical rep was

just in and it's given me some samples

and this drug I think is cleaner than

the one I'm taking

so they stopped one start another and

that's very hard to do and when I've

looked after doctors like that they feel

so relieved to actually have somebody

sort of looking after them in that

regard so but again that is rooted in

stigma and the groups who do this the

most are primary care doctors and

psychiatrists themselves when I wrote a

piece on my blog as to why psychiatrists

self-medicate I when that was published

I got six phone calls within a week from

psychiatrists who called me looking for

psychiatrists to take over their care so

I mean it's something that I think is

done but yet it's somewhat ego-dystonic

and you know the person really does

indeed want somebody to treat them so

that's when your tutors that when we

treat our family members that's also

setting up all kinds of dynamics which

could exist with I've seen some doctors

do it because they're kind of arrogant

and they think nobody can treat my

family like I can because I'm so good

some though I've seen other doctors who

are actually seduced by their family

members that they don't want to be

treating them but but the Rice's look at

but I'm not going to go for any

treatment that if you don't treatment

and so they're trying to save a life in

their own family and they don't like

doing it but you know family dynamics

can be very very tricky so it is very

complicated but the more of course that

we can you know make sure that it's done

properly the better there's some

questions about some your information

and data on physician suicide if that

extrapolates

to mid-level practitioners and nurse

practitioners and pas you know we don't

know that I was with a group that we did

a program on clinician suicide and I

just did the physician suicide piece

because that's the only one I feel

qualified with in medical students the

other person who did psychologists

nurses clinical social workers found

that there was there's very few days I

think there's some data on psychologists

but they're very few data on other other

group

within the mental health professional

umbrella so you know I just don't think

that we really have those data yes

there's still stigma there but you know

I think again the more that we can kind

of despite stigma in general in the

mental health that's the kind of sad

part that we I think we're afraid that

we're going to be judged you know when

I've looked after psychiatrists who have

lost kids to suicide that's first of all

whole to lose a family member to suicide

to lose a child to suicide then to lose

this in when you're a psychiatrist you

just feel how could this happen

under my watch well you know you're the

parent not necessarily the treating

person but it's so hard and you feel

judged by others like what kind of

psychiatrist has a child who kills

yourself or kills himself I mean this is

we live in a harsh world at times so

it's very hard we all have to be kind of

more forgiving and open judgmental

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