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Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout

INTRODUCTION: Suicide among physicians constitutes a public health problem that deserves more consideration. A recently performed meta-analysis and systematic review evaluated suicide mortality in physicians by gender and investigated several related risk factors. It showed that the post-1980 suicid...

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Autores principales: Duarte, Dante, El-Hagrassy, Mirret M., Couto, Tiago, Gurgel, Wagner, Minuzzi, Luciano, Saperson, Karen, Corrêa, Humberto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Associação de Psiquiatria do Rio Grande do Sul 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10226769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34788525
http://dx.doi.org/10.47626/2237-6089-2021-0293
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author Duarte, Dante
El-Hagrassy, Mirret M.
Couto, Tiago
Gurgel, Wagner
Minuzzi, Luciano
Saperson, Karen
Corrêa, Humberto
author_facet Duarte, Dante
El-Hagrassy, Mirret M.
Couto, Tiago
Gurgel, Wagner
Minuzzi, Luciano
Saperson, Karen
Corrêa, Humberto
author_sort Duarte, Dante
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Suicide among physicians constitutes a public health problem that deserves more consideration. A recently performed meta-analysis and systematic review evaluated suicide mortality in physicians by gender and investigated several related risk factors. It showed that the post-1980 suicide mortality was 46% higher in female physicians than among women in the general population, while the risk in male physicians was 33% lower than among men in general, despite an overall contraction in physician mortality rates in both genders. METHODS: This narrative review was conducted by searching and analyzing articles/databases that were relevant to addressing questions raised by a prior meta-analysis and how they might be affected by COVID-19. This process included unstructured searches on Pubmed for physician suicide, burnout, judicialization of medicine, healthcare organizations, and COVID-19, and Google searches for relevant databases and medical society, expert, and media commentaries on these topics. We focus on three factors critical to addressing physician suicides: epidemiological data limitations, psychiatric comorbidities, and professional overload. RESULTS: We found relevant articles on suicide reporting, physician mental health, the effects of healthcare judicialization, and organizational involvement on physician and patient health, and how COVID-19 may impact such factors. This review addresses information sources, underreporting/misreporting of physician suicide rates, inadequate diagnosis and management of psychiatric comorbidities and the chronic effects on physicians’ work capacity, and, finally, judicialization of medicine and organizational failures increasing physician burnout. We discuss these factors in general and in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic. CONCLUSIONS: We present an overview of the above factors, discuss possible solutions, and specifically address how COVID-19 may impact such factors.
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spelling pubmed-102267692023-05-30 Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout Duarte, Dante El-Hagrassy, Mirret M. Couto, Tiago Gurgel, Wagner Minuzzi, Luciano Saperson, Karen Corrêa, Humberto Trends Psychiatry Psychother Review Article INTRODUCTION: Suicide among physicians constitutes a public health problem that deserves more consideration. A recently performed meta-analysis and systematic review evaluated suicide mortality in physicians by gender and investigated several related risk factors. It showed that the post-1980 suicide mortality was 46% higher in female physicians than among women in the general population, while the risk in male physicians was 33% lower than among men in general, despite an overall contraction in physician mortality rates in both genders. METHODS: This narrative review was conducted by searching and analyzing articles/databases that were relevant to addressing questions raised by a prior meta-analysis and how they might be affected by COVID-19. This process included unstructured searches on Pubmed for physician suicide, burnout, judicialization of medicine, healthcare organizations, and COVID-19, and Google searches for relevant databases and medical society, expert, and media commentaries on these topics. We focus on three factors critical to addressing physician suicides: epidemiological data limitations, psychiatric comorbidities, and professional overload. RESULTS: We found relevant articles on suicide reporting, physician mental health, the effects of healthcare judicialization, and organizational involvement on physician and patient health, and how COVID-19 may impact such factors. This review addresses information sources, underreporting/misreporting of physician suicide rates, inadequate diagnosis and management of psychiatric comorbidities and the chronic effects on physicians’ work capacity, and, finally, judicialization of medicine and organizational failures increasing physician burnout. We discuss these factors in general and in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic. CONCLUSIONS: We present an overview of the above factors, discuss possible solutions, and specifically address how COVID-19 may impact such factors. Associação de Psiquiatria do Rio Grande do Sul 2023-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10226769/ /pubmed/34788525 http://dx.doi.org/10.47626/2237-6089-2021-0293 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Duarte, Dante
El-Hagrassy, Mirret M.
Couto, Tiago
Gurgel, Wagner
Minuzzi, Luciano
Saperson, Karen
Corrêa, Humberto
Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout
title Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout
title_full Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout
title_fullStr Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout
title_full_unstemmed Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout
title_short Challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the COVID-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout
title_sort challenges and potential solutions for physician suicide risk factors in the covid-19 era: psychiatric comorbidities, judicialization of medicine, and burnout
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10226769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34788525
http://dx.doi.org/10.47626/2237-6089-2021-0293
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