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The Physician as Patient: A Clinical Handbook for Mental Health Professionals. By Michael F. Myers & Glen O. Gabbard. American Psychiatric Publishing. 2008. US$46.00 (pb). 252pp. ISBN 9781585623129

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Tony Garelick*
Affiliation:
MedNet, 120 Belsize Lane, London NW3 5BA, UK. Email: mednet@tavi-port.nhs.uk
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Abstract

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Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2008 

As physicians' psychological or behavioural difficulties are a taboo subject this book is to be welcomed. When it comes to these types of personal health needs, physicians arguably are a disadvantaged group, as often they are very reluctant to seek help from a colleague. This book discusses these issues both in terms of engagement and confidentiality.

The Physician as Patient is a well-written, comprehensive account that addresses all the relevant issues ranging from diagnosis to treatment. It is well-referenced and uses a burgeoning body of research that is emerging in this area. The authors are very experienced clinicians and have drawn on their considerable clinical practice in North America. The text is made more accessible by the inclusion of numerous clinical vignettes and a summary of key points at the end of each chapter. The chapters cover such topics as physician characteristics, treatment of physicians with addictions, physicians who attempt to take their own life, the aftermath of physician suicide and suicide prevention.

The strength of the book is that it is clinically down to earth both in discussing the challenges of engaging physicians in their own treatment and in describing a range of clinical approaches tailored to the needs of the individual. Thoughtful contributions deepen one's understanding of the variety of difficulties, including those of professional boundary violations.

There are many interesting nuggets, such as the authors' claim that the most common personality characteristics of physicians reside in the more obsessional compulsive area which includes perfectionism and excessive devotion to work. This is well-known by physicians themselves, but is perhaps in contrast to the view held by some governments that doctors do not work hard enough.

The authors quote interesting work on the difference between male and female physicians, for example that suicide rates are three times higher in female physicians than in their male counterparts. One study has found that female physicians spend 50% more time than their male counterparts in dealing with new patient consultation and have 1.6 times the odds of reporting burnout. However, male physicians were 3 times more likely to be in the higher claims group for malpractice. This might suggest that female physicians interact more effectively with their patients but at greater emotional cost, which is likely to be of increasing significance with the feminisation of the workforce.

The morbidity rates in the profession quoted in the book are alarming: ‘On average death by suicide is about 70% more likely among male physicians in the United States than among other professionals and 250–400% higher among female physicians’. On a less sombre note is the interesting finding from a study that investigated couple relationships, which found that physicians who sought marital counselling on average talked to their spouses 30.5 minutes per day whereas those who neither considered nor sought marital counselling averaged 57.3 minutes per day, a novel way perhaps of ascertaining the possible health of a relationship. This possibly reflects some of the challenges and difficulties in being able to achieve a work/life balance.

The Physician as Patient is a very good and helpful book and I recommend it to anybody who is involved in treating physicians, is interested in physicians' health or to educators responsible for preparing future generations of doctors to cope with the challenges of their life as members of the medical profession.

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