Urgent
action needed to tackle problems suffered by doctors, lawyers and people in
other high-profile jobs, say healthcare experts
Experts are calling for urgent action to
tackle the "significant challenge" of rising levels of alcoholism and
substance abuse among professionals including doctors, dentists and lawyers.
At the first international conference of its
kind, in Ireland this weekend, there were calls for the UK government to help
the silent mass of professionals who were "functioning alcoholics".
Rory O'Connor, the UK co-ordinator of health
support programmes for dentists and veterinary surgeons, told the Observer that
Britain was turning a blind eye to a huge problem. He said: "There are
serious issues regarding health professionals accessing appropriate help for
mental health issues and there are serious issues in the treatment that is out
there for them."
Research suggests 15-24% of lawyers will
suffer from alcoholism during their careers, while the British Medical
Association estimates that one in 15 healthcare professionals will develop an
addiction problem. Doctors are three times more likely to develop cirrhosis of
the liver than the general population.
One indicator of the growing problem is the
rise in the popularity of "rehab tourism". Reports from private
healthcare companies indicate a growing number of "mental health
tourists" – professionals seeking treatment abroad.
O'Connor said: "That is hardly
surprising, as they can afford it. These are people functioning with varying
degrees and levels of impairment and not likely to seek help among their peers.
They can't go to the hospital down the road where everyone will know them, can
they? It's one reason why they are such a hard-to-reach group.
"If you ask the man in the street what an
alcoholic is, they'll generally say a down and out, but 96% of people with
addictions actually function quite well most of the time. They are captains of
industry, medical directors, vets, dentists… and we need to tackle it and to
look at the acceptance that has been going on in their regulatory bodies."
He said the behavioural health conference,
held at Toranfield House addiction centre in County Wicklow, was the first step
in sending out a strong message that addiction needed to be tackled in the way
smoking had been. "From an economic perspective, ignoring this issue is
not a very wise thing to do, and from a public safety aspect it's not wise to
have people out there who are practising while impaired through
addiction."
O'Connor has established self-help support
groups for UK health professionals including doctors, dentists, vets and
pharmacists. "Health professionals are generally not good at seeking help
for themselves, mainly because they see it very much as their role to help
others. There is also immense shame, a stigma still attached to a perceived
weakness like addiction."
Going abroad for help was one way to avoid
that stigma, said Keith Pollard, the managing director of Intuition
Communication, which runs the information website treatmentabroad.com. He said
that while other types of medical tourism were waning in the recession, demand
for rehabilitation clinics abroad was on the rise.
"That area of the market is doing very
well. The driver is a combination of less chance of your treatment becoming
public knowledge and putting a distance between [you and] the drinking culture
to aid your rehab," he said.
Alastair Mordey, the programme director of the
Cabin, a substance abuse clinic in Chiang Mai, Thailand, said demand for
treatment programmes for doctors was growing at twice the rate as that for
other occupations.
Mordey said the numbers were shocking.
"The picture is disturbing. We are seeing a lot of professionals coming
in, particularly from London. In Britain absolutely there is a silent mass of
professionals who are functioning, in terms of that they haven't lost
everything, but they are in workplaces where you really wouldn't want them to
be. Not only those who are responsible for health and human lives, but also
bankers who are responsible for our economy." He said that while it was
not a conscious policy to tolerate addictions of professionals, many firms did.
"In healthcare, doctors and nurses are
famous for a riotous social life. But in public health terms I don't see why
that can't be tackled. Binge drinking could be brought down in the same way the
UK tackled smoking."
He said that rehab could be more difficult for
better-educated people who found it harder to let themselves be helped by their
peers. "Those professionals have the most to lose. In the UK and other
countries like Australia and the US there is that Anglo-Saxon mentality – a
work hard, play hard culture."
Ed, 34, a dentist who sought help at the
Cabin, said his problems began as a medical student. "On Fridays everyone
would be off down the pub. That drinking culture makes it so much easier to get
into alcoholism once the stress of working life starts to take effect.
"I didn't seek help myself until my wife
threatened to pack her bags and go. Without a doubt it was very hard to seek
help."
Tracy McVeigh
The Observer
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