Trigger warning: This post features references of suicide and may cause distress.
Earlier this year, my fellow doctor and beautiful friend, took her own life.
The news was absolutely devastating. I was completely and utterly floored. Of all people, surely not her? Surely not one of the smartest and most motivated people most of us had ever met.
When I asked a colleague, let’s call her “Dr A,” to express how he feels about her loss she told me: “Every time it pops up, I think about it again and just feel so upset. The problem is, almost all of the junior doctors I know have felt that way at one time or another. We’ve all been through our gruelling medical degrees and ‘trial by fire’ starting out work.”
Top Comments
This article rings very true. As a junior doc it is so easy to live inside medicine and analyse everything that happens at work. Things do get better once your training is done, but you have to get there first. It won't change in a hurry, medicine is too steeped in tradition, although things are improving with better hours and more support for juniors. Maybe not enough, but certainly more than 10 years ago.
The one thing I tell junior doctors and med students is to find a group of supportive doctor friends at the same stage of training as yourself, and go out one night a week or morning a week if on night shift. The purpose is to debrief, whinge about work and your bosses, and talk through issues. It really is useful, and will help even more as you become more senior and the responsibility level gets much higher.
Then try to live a life outside of med, with friends and interests that have nothing to do with it. Hopefully with people who don't really care what you do. Adds a bit of perspective that it is a job, all consuming at times but still just a job. And if you fail, which you will at times, life does go on. It does get easier for most with time and experience.
I would add that depression and suicide is not an issue that just affects med students and junior doctors. I am a senior specialist, and have lost four colleagues to suicide, and know of countless others with mental health struggles. We should not give the impression that this problem is isolated to a small pocket of our profession.