National Mental Health Survey of Doctors and Medical Students
27 Nov 2013

The National Mental Health Survey of Doctors and Medical Students identifies the challenges faced by the medical profession and outlines how they can be tackled, including initiatives such as the development of a mental health strategy for the Australian medical community to promote good mental health; the development of guidelines around working hours; better mental health education in universities to reduce stigma; and awareness campaigns.
The key findings of beyondblue’s landmark survey include the following:
- One in five medical students and one in 10 doctors had suicidal thoughts in the past year, compared with one in 45 people in the wider community.
- A number of vulnerable subgroups exist within the medical community – these include female doctors, young doctors, doctors working in rural and remote areas, and Indigenous students.
- More than four in 10 students and a quarter of doctors are highly likely to have a minor psychiatric disorder.
- Among doctors, 3.4% are experiencing very high psychological distress, much greater than the wider community.
- Young doctors work longer hours (50 per week on average), are far more psychologically distressed, think about suicide more, and experience more burnout than their older colleagues.
- Perceived stigma is rife with almost half of respondents thinking doctors with a history of depression or anxiety are less likely to be appointed, and 40% agreeing that doctors with a history of depression or anxiety were perceived as less competent than their peers.
- The most common source of work stress reported by doctors was related to balancing work and personal responsibilities. Other sources of stress included too much work (25%), responsibility at work (20.8%), long work hours (19.5%), fear of making mistakes (18.7%), bullying (4.5%) and racism (1.7%).
- Main barriers to seeking treatment and support for mental health conditions included fear of lack of confidentiality or privacy (52.5%), embarrassment (37.4%) and impact on registration and right to practice (34.3%).
Click here to view the final report from the survey.
As an advocate for our Members’ wellbeing, MDA National is continuing to lobby state and federal governments to implement mandatory reporting exclusions for treating doctors, similar to that in Western Australia. We believe such exclusions would reduce some of the barriers to medical practitioners and students seeking medical assistance, and to better manage their mental health and wellbeing. More information is available under the 'Advocacy' section of our Annual Report 2013.

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