UNITED KINGDOM — Veterinarians' suicide rate is proportionally four times that of the general population and twice that of other health professionals,
studies show.
Job stress, lethal drug access and euthanasia acceptance are among the potential driving forces behind DVMs' heightened risk,
according to "Veterinary Surgeons and Suicide: Influences, Opportunities and Research Directions," published in the UK's Veterinary
Record.
 Table 1: Interplay of factors
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Health-care professionals, including doctors, pharmacists and dentists, are all high suicide risks based on their proportional
mortality ratio (PMR), with veterinarians topping the list as the most susceptible, say article authors David Bartram, BVetMed,
DipM, MCIM, CDipAF, MRCVS, and David Baldwin, MB, BS, DM, FRCPsych, at the University of Southampton School of Medicine in
Hampshire, UK.
"The number of veterinarians who die by suicide is four times higher than would be expected based on suicide rates for the
general population," Bartram says.
The reasons for this elevated susceptibility are unknown, but Bartram is performing a mental-health study of the UK veterinary
profession to determine what they might be.
His study will assess work-related stress, other key stressors and potential intervention strategies in the profession, compare
veterinarian data with that of the general population and explore the relationship between mental well-being and demographics,
including age, gender and type of practice, among other factors.
"Such research would be important not only for the well-being of individual members of the profession, but also in view of
the potentially deleterious impact of practitioners' mental ill health on the welfare of animals under their care and the
additional insight that research in this professional group might provide into influences on suicide in other occupations,"
according to Baldwin and Bartram's Veterinary Record article.
Although study results are not expected until the fall, Bartram and Baldwin point a hypothetical finger at several possible
influences — including attitudes, opportunities and personal characteristics seen in the profession — that they believe are
driving the trend.
Access to pharmaceuticals
Deliberate drug ingestion is the most common method of veterinarian suicide, most likely because lethal medication is so openly
available in the profession.
DVMs "have ready access to medicines, as they are typically stored in practice premises, and knowledge of medicines for self-poisoning,
which together offer a possible contributory factor for their high suicide rate," say Baldwin and Bartram in the article.
 Table 2: By the numbers
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Intentional medicinal overdose accounts for an average of 82 percent of veterinarian suicides, compared with only 33 percent
in the general population, which typically does not have the everyday availability of drugs. "Access to lethal means has a
strong influence on the suicide rate," the article says.
Death in daily life
Euthanasia is a frequent duty of veterinarians, and the action must often be explained, encouraged and justified to clients.
This constant interaction, performance and support of euthanasia in the animal population may affect profession attitudes
on death in general. A small-scale European study determined that 93 percent of veterinary health-care workers interviewed
approved of human euthanasia, the authors say.
"Veterinary surgeons may experience uncomfortable tension between their desire to preserve life and their inability to treat
a case effectively, which may be ameliorated by adapting their attitudes to preserving life to perceive euthanasia as a positive
outcome. This altered attitude to death may then facilitate self-justification and lower inhibitions toward suicide as a rational
solution to their own problems."