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Doctors as Patients. By Mutaz Aldawoud July 2009. Health professionals’ health. Aim to understand more about: Health care for ourselves and our families Looking after our colleagues. Objectives. Explain why doctors find it difficult to seek help when they are ill
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Doctors as Patients By MutazAldawoud July 2009
Health professionals’ health Aim to understand more about: • Health care for ourselves and our families • Looking after our colleagues
Objectives • Explain why doctors find it difficult to seek help when they are ill • Explain why doctors find it more difficult to care for professional colleagues than ‘ordinary’ patients • State the reasons why doctors are more prone to certain illness than other members of the population • Describe ways of looking after sick colleagues more effectively • Describe and evaluate more effective ways of recognising and managing ill health in professional colleagues and yourself.
Fact or Fiction?1(class vote) • Any doctor can write a private prescription, using headed notepaper • doctors can write private prescriptions for themselves for controlled drugs including diamorphine, pethidine etc. • Doctors can write private prescriptions for family members and NHS prescriptions if they are registered on their lists • No GP can be registered as their own patient • GPs are allowed to register their spouse / children as patients • Doctors are more prone to mental illness that the rest of the population • Doctors tend to be off sick less often than the rest of the population • When they are off sick, doctors tend to be off for longer periods of time than the rest of the population • There is no comprehensive occupational health service for general practitioners • Doctors do not receive formal training in the management of their colleagues as patients
All of these are FACTS1… • Any doctor can write a private prescription, using headed notepaper • doctors can write private prescriptions for themselves for controlled drugs including diamorphine, pethidine etc. • Doctors can write private prescriptions for family members and NHS prescriptions if they are registered on their lists • No GP can be registered as their own patient • GPs are allowed to register their spouse / children as patients • Doctors are more prone to mental illness that the rest of the population • Doctors tend to be off sick less often than the rest of the population • When they are off sick, doctors tend to be off for longer periods of time than the rest of the population • There is no comprehensive occupational health service for general practitioners • Doctors do not receive formal training in the management of their colleagues as patients
Intro • Reduced well-being may lead to health problems for GPs, difficulties in coping at work and a reduction in quality of care to patients. • Unhealthy doctors cannot be expected to deliver high-quality healthcare • Doctors are reluctant to seek health care through usual mechanisms, and find it difficult to adopt the role of the patient 2. • The pressure to appear physically well – “nobody wants to go and see a doctor who is sick” 2
Intro • GPs report that their medical knowledge made them more prone to swing between panic and denial when they experienced symptoms 2 • Many studies show that, when doctors experience ill health, they disregard the advice they give their patients 3 • The medical community has developed a culture in which working through illness and self-treating is the norm • When doctors do seek external care, evidence suggests they receive a lesser quality of care than lay patients 3 • Previous studies have found differences between GPs and specialists in their patterns of health-seeking behaviour3
Doctors’ physical Health • It is well known that doctors are often reluctant to seek medical advice • One study revealed that 26% of doctors with a medical problem reported feeling inhibited consulting another doctor • Doctors enjoy a low standard mortality rate, however, this is a crude measure of health • Mortality data shows that most doctors die from physical rather than mental illness, yet most studies concentrate on their mental health. • 44% of doctors have chronic health problems 4
Doctors’ physical Health • Doctors are more than likely to suffer from one or more of ‘the three D’s’ – Drugs, Drink and Depression (including suicide) • Half of a group of 408 GPs in the United Kingdom had a serious illness or an operation as an adult5 • Illnesses experienced by doctors include all the expected categories for the population at large • 30% of doctors attending for psychiatric care were found to have a concomitant chronic physical illness5 • Doctors with physical illnesses have been reported to be at higher risk of suicide5 • In a follow-up study of a sample of UK GPs, 8.6% retired before 60 years of age because of illness5
Doctors’ physical Health - Summary • Studies of doctors’ health have emphasised psychological health, and limited data have been collected on their physical health status • Doctors often fail to follow current preventive health guidelines for their physical health. • The majority of doctors are now registered with a GP, but studies show that consultation rates were lower than the general population. Reasons given for this include ‘lack of time’ and ‘not being ill enough’. • Doctors are reluctant to take sick leave.
Doctors’ health behaviour • Only 55% of doctors have their own GP 5 • 26% of those in partnerships, general practitioners were registered with a partner in the same practice 5 • Hospital specialists are significantly more likely to advise sick doctors to consult specialists directly rather than their GPs 7 • In a 10 year retrospective study on 247 GP’s, over half had seen a specialist about their health - 51% had referred themselves. One third of medical investigations had been self-initiated 8
Doctors’ health behaviour • Doctors are more likely than other professionals to work through illness (1% vs 5% mean annual sick leave of all NHS workers (Seccombe and Patch, 1994); • Most doctors admit to working when they feel too unwell to be able to carry out their duties to the best of their ability • This may be symptomatic of a culture in which an image of invincibility is encouraged and vulnerability is denied . Also confidentiality issues as other doctors usually have access to personal data, leaving the sick doctor in a vulnerable position. • The direct result of this phenomenon is likely to be delayed presentations even for serious conditions.
Doctors’ health behaviour • From a study of 724 general practitioners and 427 consultantsin the South Thames region (1999) 6: • 71% of general practitioners and 76% consultants responded that they “usually” or “sometimes” self prescribed • 10% of general practitioners and 15% of consultants also admitted usually or sometimes self prescribing opiates, anxiolytics, antidepressants, or hypnotics • 83% of general practitioners and 70% of consultants prescribed for their family
Doctors’ health behaviour • A recent (2002) study of 300 junior doctors 9: • half self-referred to consultants or treated themselves for conditions that warranted a medical consultation; • 30% agreed that they had suffered from a medical condition they would have discussed with a doctor, but had not done so because they were doctors themselves. • 22% admitted to requesting a prescription from a work colleague; • More than 50% of respondents said they felt uncomfortable about being asked for a prescription by a colleague
Doctors’ health behaviour • A questionnaire survey on 358 Doctors’ health-seeking behaviour (2003) revealed 3 : • 90% and 25% thought self-treating acute and chronic conditions respectively, was acceptable • 51% thought that it was acceptable to order a blood test on oneself for diagnostic purposes • GPs are significantly less likely than specialists to seek appropriate treatment across several situations
Doctors’ health behaviour • In a review of literature (2004),vaccination rates against Hepatitis B amongst doctors ranged from 49% - 87%. • Other occupational risk groups (e.g. dentists and pathology lab supervisors), achieved close to 100% hep B vaccination coverage in direct comparison 5 • One study showed that 93% of GPs had checked their blood pressure and 64% had checked their cholesterol level in the previous 3 years, consistent with preventive health guidelines.
Doctors’ health behaviour • Although preventive guidelines do not recommend screening prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing, studies have found that 26%–51% of male doctors over 40 years have tested themselves • If our personal screening habits influence the screening we recommend to our patients, does this have wider ramifications?
Advantages of having an independent GP • Better documentation • Better delivery of evidence-based preventive care • Opportunities for health promotion advice • Facilitates access to the healthcare system (often difficult for doctors - we do not really know why doctors have these difficulties ….. embarrassment, delusions of invincibility, inconvenience compounded by being so busy) • Finding a GP for routine health issues means that, when a problem arises, especially if the need is urgent (or embarrassing), a relationship with a trusted GP has already been established
Looking after doctors as your patients • Boundary issues, complex in any doctor-doctor relationship, become potentially even more complicated when the patient is also a fellow doctor • There can also be excessive emotional commitment and involvement with colleagues who are patients • Doctors may experience varying reactions ranging from over-identification or defensive under identification • Issues of lowered self-esteem and a heightened sense of vulnerability are not uncommon when treating senior or peer colleagues • The treating doctor may assume too much in terms of what their colleagues know or understand about the treatment • Intensity of handling life and death issues together may lead to intimacy or mistreatment
Looking after doctors as your patients • Dr. Walter Anderson (a VTS course organiser in Yorkshire for many years) identified useful steps in helping doctors look after their colleagues as patients 1: • See your patient in optimal circumstances (own consulting room ) - not the corridor, the bar, the surgeons' changing room, the golf course, or the fishing club • Make sure that your doctor patient is registered with a general practitioner who he or she trusts • When taking your doctor patient's history, include self medication . Don't forget to ask about drugs and alcohol.
Looking after doctors as your patients cont. • Ask about self diagnosis – can easily jump to conclusions and can be reluctant to confess their fears unless coaxed. • Veto any deviations from established procedures. • speak to a relative if your doctor patient agrees, to expand the history and explain • always write a full referral letter (and telephone if you wish). If you are telephoned by general practitioner colleagues, ask them to put the referral in writing as soon as possible.
Partner patients? • If a doctor consults as a patient with one of their partners, there is likely to be 1: • Mutual embarrassment and awkwardness • An increased risk of ‘corridor consultation’ • Less adequate notes than usual • Conflict of interest if the doctor-patient really needs to be off work. In this scenario, both parties may tend to collude to pretend that the doctor-patient is not really all that ill at all and is safe to be working – The Shadow Contract
Doctors as ‘better’ patients 1 • Register with a general practitioner you can trust • Never mention a symptom to a specialist without prior discussion with your general practitioner - you want a second opinion, not a first. ‘Rehearsal effect’. • Never take any medicines that a lawyer could not purchase over the counter, or give them to anyone in your family – note GMC’s new regulation about controlled drug prescribing. • Consult by appointment in appropriate surroundings - better service and access to your notes with your history • Meticulously follow the rituals and protocols that protect non-doctor patients – do not exploit ‘loopholes’ in the system.
Key tips • Doctors (and their spouses) should be registered with a GP where the only relationship between them is that of doctor and patient • When doctors are ill or are worried about symptoms they should see their GP • Doctors should not self prescribe or self-diagnose • Use occupational Health department
Occupational health • Competent to judge fitness to work, in doctors equally as in other members of NHS staff; they are able to advise management about fitness to work and recommend ways in which an ill doctor may best be introduced back to work after an illness • Can refer sick doctors for appropriate treatment if the doctor does not have a general practitioner, or liaise with the general practitioner when he or she does • Can recommend relocation, retraining or retirement on medical grounds as appropriate • Occupational health should be seen as an integral part of health care
Resources for sick doctors • National Counselling Service for Sick Doctors. (www.ncssd.org.uk. Tel: 0870 241 0535) • BMA 24 hour stress counselling service (0645 200169) • Overseas Doctors Association's health counselling panel (0161 236 5594) • GMC's Fitness to Practise division (0171 580 7642) • Association of Anaesthetists (0171 631 1650) • Sick Doctors' Trust national helpline for addicted physicians (01252 345 163) • The British Doctors' and Dentists' Group (via the Medical Council on Alcoholism on 0171 487 4445) • DrinkLine/National Alcohol Helpline (London: 0171 332 0202. Rest of the UK: 0345 32 02 02) • Department of Health UK Expert Advisory Panel on health care workers infected with blood-borne viruses (0171 972 4378) • Royal Medical Benevolent Fund (0181 540 9194/5) • Doctors' Support Network (0171 727 3738) Email: Lizzie.miller@talk.21.com) • Leeds Professional support group – a small group of GPs with interest and expertise in helping sick colleagues • ‘Hazlewood’ - organised by the Yorkshire faculty of the Royal College of general Practitioners - 24 hours of ‘time out’ in facilitated peer groups • Speak to one of the Course Organisers, in confidence
The End • Thank you for your time.