By the end of my first year as a doctor, I was ready to kill myself

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Northerner

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Doctor suicide is the medical profession’s grubby secret – but it’s unclear why some of those dedicated to preserving life silently plot their own deaths.

On my morning drives to the hospital, the tears fell like rain. The prospect of the next 14 hours – 8am to 10pm with not a second’s respite from the nurses’ bleeps, or the overwhelming needs of too many sick patients – was almost too much to bear. But on the late-night trips back home, I’d feel nothing at all. Deadbeat, punch-drunk, it was utter indifference that nearly killed me. Every night, on an empty dual carriageway, I had to fight with myself to keep my hands on the steering wheel. The temptation to let go – of the wheel, the patients, my miserable life – was almost irresistible. Then I’d never have to haul myself through another unfeasible day at the hospital.

By the time I neared the end of my first year as a doctor, I’d chosen the spot where I intended to kill myself. I’d bought everything I needed to do it. All my youthful enthusiasm for healing, big dreams of saving lives and of making a difference, had soured and I felt an astronomic emptiness. Made monumentally selfish by depression, I’d ceased even to care what my husband would think of me, or that my little boy would grow up without his mother.

Doctor suicide is the medical profession’s grubby little secret. Female doctors aretwice as likely as the general population to take our own lives. A US study shows our suicide rate appears higher than that of other professional groups, with young doctors at the beginning of their training being particularly vulnerable. As I wrestled silently with the urge to kill myself, another house officer in my trust went right on and did it. To me, that monstrous waste of young life seemed entirely logical. The constant, haunting fear of hurting my patients, coupled with relentless rotas at work, had rendered me incapable of reason.

http://www.theguardian.com/healthca...tline/2016/jan/05/doctor-suicide-hospital-nhs
 
That matches what I think is happening - I might have to rely on any of these poor sods for my life - and it frightens me shitless that they'll be too tired and overworked to try their best to sort me out. I know how easy it was to overlook 'normal' stuff when I became stressed at work and I don't want to have to get medical care from anybody in that state. I also don't want me or anyone else I know, to be operated on either in too much of a hurry or by someone who is knackered - and I most certainly don't want them or me to be anaesthetised by someone in that state.

The current Government are not at all interested in the NHS succeeding - it costs too much - so they are collectively doing their utmost to wreck it once and for all by continually imposing extra layers of Chiefs, extra layers of reporting and less layers of Indians.
 
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