Certain Types Of Healthcare Workers Face Higher Risk Of Suicide, Research Finds

CNN (9/26, Howard) reports, “Compared with people who don’t work in the medical field, health care workers face an increased risk of suicide, especially registered nurses, health care support workers and health technicians, according to a new study.” The research “estimates that the annual suicide rate in the United States among health care workers alone is about 14 per 100,000 person-years compared with about 13 per 100,000 person-years among non-health care workers.” The findings were published in JAMA.

HealthDay (9/26, Collins) reports that physician suicide rates, “meanwhile…were roughly the same as those in the general population, at annual standardized suicide rates of 13 for every 100,000 people.” The research “also found that health care work is more strongly associated with suicide risk among female workers.”

MedPage Today (9/26, Firth) also covers the story.

Related Links:

— “US health care workers face elevated risk of suicide, new study finds,”Jacqueline Howard, CNN, September 26, 2023

Posted in In The News.