I would like to make a few additions to the interesting report by Lauren Vogel, “US doctors call for tracking suicides among medical trainees,” published in CMAJ.1
In a recent systematic review by Coentre and Góis, with 13 244 medical students from 13 different countries, the prevalence of suicidal ideation ranged from 7% to 35.6% within the preceding 12 months.2 The following major risk factors of suicidal ideation in medical students were identified: depression or depressive symptoms, previous diagnosis of a psychiatric disorder, perceived parental neglect, history of drug use, and lower socioeconomic status or financial difficulties.2
Researchers from the University of British Columbia estimated a suicide rate of 8.7/100 000 medical students per year based on a survey of the 17 Canadian medical undergraduate programs (MDUPs); 16 schools participated.3 The authors found that less than half of responding medical schools (44%) recorded data on student deaths, and only 10 MDUPs had an existing policy for responding to a suicide. For further preventive work in this area, including the exploration of risk and protective factors, the authors consider a national reporting strategy or a longitudinal prospective study to be necessary.3
According to a recently published systematic review by Blacker and colleagues, comprehensive and reliable international data on medical student suicides are not available.4 The authors conclude that “Accurate suicide data are needed to identify trends, establish predisposing and predictive factors, and identify targets for intervention.”4 To highlight the importance of comprehensive data collection on suicides among medical trainees, I recommend this review as a resource. In addition, the recent position paper by the Canadian Federation of Medical Students on responding to medical student suicide5 is worth reading.
Finally, in the first review of the international literature on suicide among physicians published nearly 50 years ago, Dr. Mathew Ross reported on possible and desirable preventive measures.6 The important influencing factors documented at that time were age, gender, medical school affiliation, type of medical practice and specialty, the state of physical and emotional health, psychiatric morbidity, the use of alcohol and drugs, and professional and psychosocial factors.6
Wouldn’t a call for tracking suicides among Canadian medical trainees be desirable as well?
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.