The reluctance was more pronounced in states where licensing
applications questioned doctors about mental health conditions going
back more than a year. Physicians in those states were at least 20
percent more likely to report they would be reluctant to seek
psychological treatment than doctors in states that asked only about
current impairment.
“The medical license application questions are getting in the way of
very treatable mental health disorders and probably contributing to
the high rates of suicide among physicians,” said lead author Dr.
Liselotte Dyrbye, a professor of medicine and medical education at
the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
Past research has found that some state medical boards might
sanction physicians just for having a mental health diagnosis,
Dyrbye’s team writes in Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Other studies have
found that disclosing mental health conditions on licensure forms
can lead to overt or covert professional discrimination, they add.
Each state has its own process for licensing doctors. The Federation
of State Medical Boards advises licensure boards not to ask about
mental health history and indicates that doing so might violate the
1990 Americans with Disabilities Act, Dyrbye and her colleagues
note.
“Our own licensing system is creating a barrier to getting help,”
said Dr. Katherine Gold, a professor at the University of Michigan
in Ann Arbor who was not involved with the new research. “Physicians
are appropriately afraid they could lose their license or have
restrictions on their license. So of course they are hesitant to
seek care.”
Doctors’ hesitation to seek psychological and psychiatric treatment
is particularly worrisome, she said, because prior research has
shown that doctors, as a group, suffer high rates of depression and
suicide.
“We should be doing everything possible to reduce stigma and
encourage physicians to get the exact same care we would prescribe
to our own patients,” she said by email.
Dyrbye and her team analyzed initial and renewal medical license
application forms from all but three states, along with more than
5,800 doctors’ answers to a survey of their attitudes about seeking
mental health treatment.
The researchers found that 32 of 48 state licensing boards continue
to question doctors about their mental health history. Of 5,829
survey participants, 2,325 reported that potential repercussions of
answering questions about their mental health on licensing
applications would make them reluctant to seek treatment.
[to top of second column] |
Dyrbye’s team describes the mental health history licensing
questions as “a major deterrent” to troubled physicians seeking
help.
The American Psychiatric Association has found no evidence that a
doctor who has been treated for a mental illness is any more likely
than a doctor with no history of mental health care to harm a
patient, Dyrbye said in a phone interview.
“We want to lift the barriers to care for mental health conditions
before physicians medicate themselves,” she said. “We need to get
people help earlier in the process. Our goal is to improve the work
lives of physicians so they can deliver excellent, compassionate
care to their patients.”
Dyrbye and Gold both called for state licensing boards to limit
application and renewal questions about mental health to just
current possible impairment.
“We do not have evidence that a physician’s past episode of
depression or anxiety poses any risk to patient care,” Gold said.
“So instead of protecting patients, these questions basically serve
to stigmatize physicians.”
Dr. Thomas Schwenk, dean of the University of Nevada, Reno, School
of Medicine, also called for dropping questions about prior history
of mental illness from medical licensing and renewal applications.
Physicians no doubt remember answering questions about whether they
sought care for mental health on their license applications when
they might later actually consider getting care, said Schwenk, who
was not involved with the study.
“There are well-accepted and appropriate ways for state licensing
boards to ask about physician impairment, and my hope is that this
study will move licensing boards to consider those changes,” he said
by email.
SOURCE: http://mayocl.in/2xZ9fHq Mayo Clinic Proceedings, online
October 2, 2017.
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |