Australian Doctor Australian Doctor 2 June 2017 | Page 3

DOCTORS ARE HUMAN TOO in silence anymore ‘Medicine is failing to care for its own’ THE BEREAVED Susan Bryant is a campaigner for doctors’ mental health from Brisbane, Queensland. Her husband, Dr Andrew Bryant, took his own life in May this year. She wrote an email urging other doctors not to suffer in silence, which was shared by hundreds of thousands of people across social media. MY husband, Dr Andrew Bryant, was a gastroenterologist who lived and worked in Brisbane. He committed suicide, in his office, on Thursday 4 May. After his death, I sent an email to a few of my work colleagues, explaining how he died. This email took me only a few minutes to write and was sent to about 10 people. I finished the email by saying: “Please, forward this email on to anyone at the firm who has asked how he died, anyone at all that might want to know, or anyone you think it may help”. I then sent it to a couple of neighbours. Our children, who had seen the email before I sent it, also posted it on social media. In the two weeks since Andrew died, my email has been read by hundreds of thousands of people around the world, published in newspapers in a number of countries, including the US and the UK, and shared widely among medical professionals. This all seems extraordinary to me, given the audience it was originally intended for. Andrew always wanted to be a doctor. His family is full of doctors: both his parents were psychiatrists, two of his brothers are anaesthetists, his sister is a psychiatric nurse, many of his cousins are doctors. Andrew graduated from the University of Queensland in 1985. We were married in 1988 and moved to live in Sydney. He completed his specialist training at Westmead Hospital in Sydney, where he decided to be a gastroenterologist and worked at the Royal North Shore Hospital. We returned to live in Brisbane in 1992, where Andrew set up his private practice. We had four children in five years. Andrew was a very hands-on dad, spending lots of time with the kids — camping, bushwalking and sailing. He was an enthusiastic volunteer at their schools in fathers’ groups and at their sporting clubs; he was a junior rugby coach for many years, was swimming club treasurer and came to all the working bees. Amidst all this he still found time to be a medic in the RAAF reserves and saw active service in Bougainville. He was passionate about aviation and had qualifications in aviation medicine. He also loved music, particularly opera, and sang in a number of choirs, including the medical choir in Brisbane. He loved travel and had been to every continent on earth. Our lives were busy and full. In my email, I said that “in retrospect the signs were there”. The tiredness, the stress, the anxiety. But those were part and parcel of his whole life as a doctor — he was usually tired and usually busy. Long days, missing family meals, working weekends to catch up on paperwork, doing rounds, concern for sick patients, distress over those who died — all these had been standard for our whole married life. Up until late February, nothing was out of the ordinary. Since I sent my email I have been contacted by many doctors, some of whom I know, but many I do not, who have told me how mental illness has affected them. Some have lost colleagues to suicide. All of them mention the reluctance among doctors to speak about mental health issues. One spoke movingly about her despair in seeing the reaction of her colleagues to the suicide of a colleague and their lack of compassion. That email concluded: “Ironically, being a doctor is an incredibly isolating and unforgiving profession, and now, older, I can understand how it fails its own.” Many, many of the emails referred to “the caring profession that is failing to care for its own”. I’m not at all uncomfortable with the way my email has been shared or the response it has received. If it can help to raise awareness or promote discussion of mental health issues in the medical profession in any way, that can only be a good thing. This wasn’t an easy decision, but ultimately proved to be the right one, as she made a good recovery and felt well supported by her practice, including when she made a graded return to work. Unfortunately, though it doesn’t always go this well. I have treated other colleagues over the years who have struggled to accept their limitations and have kept working when they should have taken a break. Others have dropped in and out of my appointment book briefly and infrequently, making it hard to form a therapeutic alliance. Still others have presented with longstanding symptoms that they have been tolerating or minimising. I am constantly amazed at what doctors will put up with. Maybe these doctor-patients got some of what they needed from our interactions, but the dynamics weren’t as effective as they could have been had we known each other better. Hence the most important lesson that my doctor-patient taught me is the importance of an established therapeutic relationship when things go a bit pear-shaped. The fact that we had established the boundaries and rules of engagement around the easy stuff meant that we could both turn our minds to the hard stuff when it came along. And recovering from depression is one of the hardest things people have to do. Every doctor needs their own GP — we hear this said a lot, it’s almost a cliché. But really what we all need is a safe place to talk about our fears and challenges, and to get guidance and advice from someone we trust. Treating our colleagues can be an anxious experience. We worry about making a mistake, having our clinical acumen critically assessed, and coming up short in the eyes of our colleague. But invariably, the doctor-patient sitting across from us is feeling even more anxious and vulnerable. It hasn’t been easy for them to come to see you, worrying about whether this attendance is valid and the problem is legitimate. Neither party needs to have all the answers, just a preparedness to tolerate some initial discomfort in order to build a platform of trust and safety. If you would like to further develop your confidence and skills to treat colleagues, the Doctors Health Advisory Services in each state deliver training for just this purpose (see resources below). Special thanks to my doctor-patient for collaborating on this story. ‘TREATING OUR COLLEAGUES CAN BE AN ANXIOUS EXPERIENCE. WE WORRY ABOUT COMING UP SHORT.’ www.australiandoctor.com.au 2 June 2017 | Australian Doctor | 3