The British Journal of Psychiatry 131: 1-10 (1977)
© 1977 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric illness in male doctors and controls: an analysis of Scottish hospitals in-patient data
RM Murray
An investigation was undertaken into the first admissions to (for the years
1963, 1965, 1968, 1972) and the total discharges from (for the years
1963-72) Scottish mental hospitals and psychiatric units of male doctors
and other social class I males. The overall rates for both first admission
and for all discharges were more than twice as high among male doctors as
among other social class I males. First admission and total discharge rates
for drug dependence, alcoholism, neurotic and 'functional' depression and
for affective psychosis were all significantly higher among doctors than
non-doctors. Doctors were more likely than non-doctors to have been
referred by themselves or by medical sources other than general
practitioners, and were as willing as non-doctors to enter hospital
voluntarily. Creater access to psychiatrists may have contributed to their
higher rates in in-patient care, but it is improbable that such factors
accounted for all of the excess in rates of drug dependence, alcoholism and
depression.