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Affleck Centre, Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Morningside Terrace, Edinburgh EH10 5HF
Royal Cornhill Hospital, Aberdeen
Department of Mental Health, University of Aberdeen
University of Aberdeen
Centre for Trauma Research, Royal Cornhill Hospital, Aberdeen
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Abstract |
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This survey is the first UK study of trainee psychiatrists' experiences of patient suicide. One hundred and three senior and specialist registrars in psychiatry working in Scotland completed the questionnaire, representing an 81% response rate.
RESULTS
Almost half (47%) had experienced suicide of a patient in their care or otherwise known to them (e.g. through on-call experiences). Although only 28% recalled previous training on issues to consider following a suicide, all of these doctors found this to be of value. Many reported that patient suicide had a deleterious impact on their personal and professional lives. The most valuable supports were informal, and the trainees' consultants appeared particularly well placed to offer support and advice.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Many trainee psychiatrists experience the suicide of a patient. Such experiences have potential for adverse effects on doctors' professional practice and personal life. Greater availability of training in this area would allow trainees to be better prepared for such an event. Trainees' consultants have a pivotal role to play in providing appropriate advice and support after a patient suicide.
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Introduction |
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Chemtob et al (1988), in a survey of 643 psychiatrists in the USA achieved, after considerable effort, a 46% response rate. Of the respondents 51% reported experience of suicide of a patient in their care and many found such experiences to be particularly upsetting and to have an impact upon their professional and personal lives. Particularly distressing experiences of patient suicide were related to psychiatrists being younger, having lower levels of training and having spent fewer years in psychiatry. This would suggest that patient suicide might be especially traumatic for psychiatrists in training. Chemtob et al (1988) concluded that informal supports were of most help in enabling individuals to deal with the considerable "post-trauma symptoms" which followed patient suicide, that suicide of a patient was "a very real occupational hazard" for psychiatrists, and that training to prepare for patient suicide was lacking.
Our NHS differs in many respects from health services in North America and thus we do not know if patient suicide has a similar impact on NHS psychiatrists to that described by Chemtob et al (1988) and others. Although the UK literature in this area is minimal, anecdotal and tends to focus upon effects of suicide on nursing staff (e.g. Farrington, 1995), many NHS trusts now have critical incident review procedures apparently designed both to address staff's emotional needs and to ascertain deficits in care or disciplinary issues. Are these procedures just paying lip-service to staff's needs? Do unrealistic public expectations fuelled by political policy engender a blame culture? We decided to examine Scottish trainee psychiatrists' experiences of and reactions to suicide of their patients and to attempt to delineate issues of particular importance to be considered in constructing guidelines for the management of such incidents.
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The study |
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We targeted this questionnaire at trainees across all psychiatric specialities working as senior or specialist registrars in Scotland. Names and addresses were obtained from the Royal College of Psychiatrists, from postgraduate deans, from colleagues who had themselves recently surveyed higher trainees and through personal contacts generated a mailing list which we believe to have been comprehensive.
In view of the sensitive nature of some of the questions the support of the College was obtained before mailing the questionnaire. In order to protect anonymity, the researching clinicians (I.G.D., D.A.A. and J.M.E.) chose not to read individuals' responses. The non-clinical researchers (S.K. and N.M.G) were privy to this information, since it was necessary to identify respondents so that a repeat mailing could be sent to non-responders.
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Findings |
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While 96% of respondents had received training in suicide risk assessment, only 28% recalled any training in issues to be considered following patient suicide. All of the latter group rated this experience as moderately or extremely useful. Ninety per cent of trainees who had received such training reported that this included information on the potential effects of patient suicide on staff.
Although we had considered the possibility that relatively few trainees would report intimate experience of patient suicide, 47% reported the suicide of a patient under their care and a further 40% had been "closely involved in the consequences of the suicide" of a patient not directly under their care (e.g. out of hours duties). The number of suicides experienced ranged from 1-5.
The most distressing suicide
Trainees who had experienced more than one suicide were asked to focus upon
their most distressing suicide in terms of its personal impact on them. The
patients involved were predominantly young adults, 59% being in the
14-40-year-old age group. Fifty-nine per cent were male, and 62% had a known
previous history of self-harm. Sixty-five per cent were current in-patients
and 24% were detained. Ninety-three per cent of in-patients were on general
observations only, that is, were not deemed to be at high risk of imminent
suicide. The diagnoses encompassed all main areas of psychiatric practice.
The methods of suicide reported were as follows: hanging, 26%; jumping, 22%; poisoning/overdose, 17%; drowning, 9%; laceration, 5%; firearm, 3%; and other, 15%. None had died by asphyxiation from exhaust gases. The prominence of violent deaths may reflect the high numbers of in-patient suicides. Only 9% of respondents saw the body after death.
Why was this particular suicide experienced as being particularly distressing? For some, it was the only suicide that had been experienced, but those who reported more than one patient suicide frequently noted that their first experience of patient suicide had been the most distressing. The other particularly frequent theme was that the suicide was unexpected and had not been predicted, occurring when the patient seemed to be improving or making plans for the future. Several respondents felt to blame in some way. Others noted that the victim was young and on occasions had young children. Less frequently cited reasons for the degree of distress occasioned by the suicide were diverse but included knowing the patient well, disliking the patient, the method of suicide, the blame of relatives and having been the last to speak to the deceased.
Adverse effects on personal and professional life
Thirty-one per cent of trainee psychiatrists reported that the suicide had
an adverse impact on some aspect of their personal lives. The most commonly
reported effect was a continuing preoccupation about the suicide and how it
could have been prevented. Also frequently mentioned were problems with
anxiety, guilt, insomnia and loss of confidence.
Thirty-nine per cent recalled the suicide adversely affecting their work. Many reported increased anxiety and difficulty in making decisions, particularly when this involved patients with recognised increased risk of self-harm. Management became over-cautious, specifically when deciding on observation levels, passes and discharge for in-patients. Nine per cent of respondents reported giving consideration to a change of career. A few psychiatrists decided not to pursue careers in general adult psychiatry because of its perceived higher risk of patient suicide.
Very few doctors took any time off work as a consequence of the suicide.
Post-suicide management: what happened and what helped
When team meetings/reviews or critical incident reviews did occur most
trainees reported them to have been personally helpful. Twenty-eight per cent
indicated that the team meeting/review was not applicable and 56% stated the
same for the critical incident review. This suggests that in some instances
these post-incident procedures do not occur or trainees do not attend
them.
Many doctors suggested that it was not the formal supports that were of most value, but rather the informal. Most had discussed the death with involved team colleagues (95%), their own consultant (92%), family/partner (82%) and friends (69%). Other sources were seldom relevant, and notably, their general practitioner was consulted by only 2% of trainees. The perceived benefit from the individuals who may have been involved in assisting the trainee to come to terms with the suicide varied. Family and friends were usually helpful and never unhelpful. Team colleagues were often helpful but not always. The trainees' own consultants fare strikingly variably, being the most frequently cited very helpful and very unhelpful individuals: 39% thought the consultant's involvement had been very helpful but 6% suggested the consultant had been very unhelpful.
Fatal accident inquiries were usually perceived as neither helpful nor unhelpful. Nineteen per cent of trainees were aware of press publicity about the suicide and only 33% of these trainees found this to be moderately distressing. Other events such as disciplinary and legal proceedings were exceedingly rare.
Open text comments
To maintain anonymity it is not appropriate to provide very detailed
quotations, but the list below gives some of the themes which were
characteristic of the points made by respondents in the open text
sections.
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Discussion |
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Despite the frequency of experiences of patient suicide, only a small minority had been prepared by previous training for the potential consequences or the organisational procedures which follow suicide. Given that trainees who had received such training found it to be of value, and noting similar results from other studies in this area (e.g. Chemtob et al, 1988), we would contend that such training should be provided in postgraduate education programmes for psychiatrists. This should better prepare our junior psychiatrists to deal with patient suicide when it does occur.
The effects of stress and the risk of burn-out among the medical profession are factors which have been increasingly recognised over recent years (Caplan, 1994; Ramirez et al, 1996; Guthrie et al, 1999). As a buffer against work-related stress, the support which junior staff perceive from consultants may be crucial (Firth-Cozens, 1987). In a large sample of psychiatrists working in Sweden and in Birmingham, Thomsen et al (1998) concluded that support with work-related problems was crucial to their concept of a healthy workplace, and it seems that community-based mental health staff are more stressed than those based in hospital which may relate to the increased professional isolation among the former group (Prosser et al, 1996). Each of these findings underscores the need for interpersonal support among psychiatric professionals in general, and the provision of appropriate support and assistance at a time of considerable personal trauma (such as patient suicide) might be taken as a marker of an appropriate working environment for trainees in psychiatry.
Only three-quarters of trainees appeared to have discussed the suicide and its aftermath at a team meeting, and less than half had attended a critical incident review. These events have other functions in addition to the provision of support and, given that trainees reported that they are helpful, this should reinforce the need for their routine occurrence following suicides. The trainees' consultant appears to be particularly influential, having an opportunity to provide potentially valuable advice. Most consultants appear to do well in supporting their trainees at these times, but some do poorly. Given the theme of self-blame which arose commonly, it would seem especially important that trainee psychiatrists are helped to disentangle issues of clinical management from less rational feelings arising from concerns about personal failure and responsibility. Recognition by all our consultant colleagues of the potential impact of patient suicide on training grade psychiatrists would, therefore, be of value, and trainee education could usefully include the issue of how, as consultants, support can be optimally provided.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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