| By Suzanne Batchelor | SACOBSERVER.COM
WIRE SERVICES WASHINGTON (NNPA via WOMENSNEWS)
- Female physicians excel in eating right, exercising
and other healthy behaviors, researchers say, compared to
other women. But when it comes to coping with serious depression
and stress, something is very wrong: Female physicians are
dying by suicide at a rate two to three times greater than
women outside the profession.
Saddened by the suicide deaths of female colleagues in 1997
during her Vienna residency and of a medical student in 2001,
epidemiologist Dr. Eva Schernhammer of Boston's Harvard Medical
School and Channing Laboratory wanted to know whether female
physicians had a higher rate of suicide, as some research
had suggested. So she began an analysis of 25 studies of North
American and northern European physicians and suicide.
When a woman is a physician, Schernhammer found, her suicide
risk becomes greater than that of other professional women
and women generally.
Female physicians die by suicide at a rate ''substantially
higher'' than that of women in the general population, lead
researcher Schernhammer and Graham Colditz reported in the
December 2004 issue of American Journal of Psychiatry.
The pattern of female physicians' higher rate appeared when
all 25 studies, selected for quality, were compared, Schernhammer
explained, though each study had focused on smaller physician
groups, such as some U.S. states, certain years or countries.
A complete number for all U.S. physician suicide deaths each
year, male and female, is harder to find, Schernhammer said.
Psychiatrist Dr. Herbert Hendin, medical director of the New
York-based nonprofit American Foundation for Suicide Prevention,
agreed. Pressed for a rough estimate, Hendin said the number
might be about 250 a year. The number of suicide deaths may
be higher still, because the under-reporting of suicide is
a well-documented problem, Schernhammer said, as coroners
with any doubt about the cause of death often call it accidental.
Schernhammer and Colditz' research also confirmed male physicians'
suicide risk tobe somewhat higher than men in the general
population. In the U.S. generally, male suicide deaths outnumber
the female by 4 to 1, according to the National Institute
of Mental Health.
Dr. Erica Frank of Atlanta's Emory University is principal
investigator of the Women Physicians' Health Study of 4,501
female U.S. physicians. She found that female physicians smoke
and drink less, wear seat belts and exercise more, are more
likely to get recommended health screenings, and eat more
fruits and vegetables and less fat than other U.S. females.
A month earlier, Frank had published another research finding
from the same study of 4,501 female physicians: Nearly half
(47.7 percent) of U.S. female physicians said they had experienced
gender bias and 36.9 percent reported sexual harassment. Younger
physicians reported higher rates of sexual harassment than
older ones and medical schools were the most common site,
wrote Frank, ''perhaps because of the importance of hierarchy''
there.
''There's some stigma attached if you are a doctor and admit
you have problems,'' Schernhammer speculated. She said she
hopes their findings will attract researchers who will investigate
why women physicians kill themselves.
Schernhammer emphasized that her study shows the female physician
suicide rate but can't show the reasons why and that risk
factor research is badly needed. Still, she said, she can
speculate based on her own observations.
''There are so many situations in medicine where one could
easily get overwhelmed if there is an underlying problem as
well,'' said Schernhammer. ''Work load is a huge stress factor
for physicians, with a hundred or more work hours per week.
Sleep deprivation is another enormous stress factor.''
''Even though I personally don't have a family,'' Schernhammer
said, ''I imagine that double work load from both housekeeping
and being a physician may add additional stress, especially
in societies where it's not customary to have a nanny at home
and where women tend to take over large parts of the housework.''
She said she knows of only one physician suicide study,
done in Germany, that provided information on whether the
female physicians were married or single, with or without
children.
In 1970, women were 7.6 percent of all physicians in the
United States. By 2002, women's share had risen to 25.2 percent.
Today women remain a minority of U.S. physicians, but this
school year (2004-2005) women became nearly one-half (49.5
percent) of all medical school students, according to the
American Medical Association.
Many female physicians are quick to point out, however, that
the profession still has very few women in top medical school
posts.
''It will take years or decades before women will be fully
represented in the leading positions in their profession,''
Schernhammer said.
Dr. Molly Carnes, head of Madison's University of Wisconsin
Center for Women's Health Research, agrees that women still
have underdog status in medicine.
''Women can't get to leadership positions in medicine,''
Carnes said. ''If you look at the senior faculty in academic
medical centers, it's still less than 10 percent. We have
fewer than 10 deans who are women.''
Carnes points to Dr. Frank's 1998 research Frank of indicating
a ''dose-response'' relationship between gender bias and sexual
harassment in the medical workplace and female physicians'
depression and suicide. The more bias and harassment a female
physician experienced in her career, the more likely she would
suffer from depression and die by suicide, Carnes said.
''Sexual harassment continues to occur. Every year we have
at least one report from a medical student,'' Carnes said.
''I've had it, hands reaching over to grab your knee, someone
corners you, makes lewd suggestions during national meetings.
I was, 'Oh, come on, get a clue!' It's about keeping women
in their place, viewed as sexual objects.''
Far from being less intense at higher professional levels,
Carnes said that gender bias actually intensifies for women
as they pursue higher professional rank.
''Generation after generation the awareness of gender bias
increases,'' said Carnes. ''My mother experienced gender bias
in college. For me, college was a given but it (bias) kicked
in medical school. Now, for the generation after me, it doesn't
kick in until medical school or residency, but at the fellowship
level or faculty level where the minority level dips below
50 percent substantially. The higher up they go, the more
they hit against the system that is biased against women across
the board.''
Dr. Alan Swann of the University of Texas Medical School
at Houston is a psychiatrist specializing in suicide and in
stress. He praised the quality of Schernhammer's study and
agreed that much is still unknown about why physicians, male
and female, have a higher suicide rate than the general population,
though alcohol and substance abuse, depression, stress and
loss of social supports and isolation, such as after divorce,
play a part in suicides generally.
Swann said physicians' overall suicide rate, though troubling,
remains lower than that of alcoholics, and lower still than
that of elderly White men, who have the highest suicide rate.
Still, Swann was surprised to see female physicians' risk
far exceed that of other women.
But, Swann said, alcoholism, major depression or bipolar
disorder magnify the risk of suicide and ''it's a higher magnification
in women than in men. Sort of like being a doctor does, but
it's a gender effect.''
Attention to all physician suicide is overdue, said Hendin,
a suicide specialist. He said Schernhammer's study indicated
that female physicians had risen to the persistently high
rate of male physician suicide and that widespread changes
are needed in their profession.
Although stressful events may trigger suicide, most people
who die by suicide already suffer from a mood disorder, most
commonly depression (30 percent to 70 percent of suicide victims),
according to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention,
and depression is treatable.
''Physicians don't diagnose depression in themselves or
in their patients. They aren't trained to recognize it,''
said Hendin. And when they do, they may be penalized.
''If they indicate they are in treatment, in some states
that makes it hard to get their license and there are some
problems with regard to insurance and how hospitals treat
them, if they will be watched or guarded,'' Hendin said. ''And
that's without regard to whether they have impairment.''
Hendin said his foundation, along with the Milbank Foundation
for Rehabilitation, have already gathered physicians, representatives
from hospitals, the U.S. medical licensing boards and insurance
companies, to find out how to make it easier for physicians
to get help. Their recommendations will be published late
this year or in 2006.
This story comes special to NNPA from WOMENSNEWS.
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