A cross-sectional study of mental health and well-being and their associations in the UK veterinary profession
A cross-sectional study of mental health and well-being and their associations in the UK veterinary profession
Background Veterinary surgeons are at elevated risk of suicide, with a proportional mortality ratio around four times that of the general population and approximately twice that of other healthcare professions. There has been much speculation regarding possible mechanisms underlying increased suicide risk in the profession but little empirical research. We aimed to assess the contribution of mental health and well-being to the elevated risk, through a postal questionnaire survey of a large stratified random sample of veterinary surgeons practising within the UK.
Methods A questionnaire was mailed twice to 3,200 veterinary surgeons. Anxiety and depressive symptoms, alcohol consumption, suicidal ideation, positive mental well-being, perceptions of psychosocial work characteristics, and work–home interaction were assessed using valid and reliable existing instruments and a series of bespoke questions previously developed through informal focus groups.
Results Evaluable questionnaires were returned by 1,796 participants, a response rate of 56.1%. The demographic and occupational profile of respondents was representative of the UK veterinary profession. The prevalence of ‘caseness’ (i.e. HADS subscale score ?8) for anxiety, depression, and co-morbid anxiety and depression was 26.3, 5.8 and 4.5%. 5.4% of respondents were non-drinkers, 32.0% low-risk drinkers, and 62.6% ‘at-risk’ drinkers (i.e. AUDIT-C score ?4 for women, ?5 for men). The 12-month prevalence of suicidal thoughts was 21.3%.
Conclusions Compared to the general population, the sample reported high levels of anxiety and depressive symptoms; higher 12-month prevalence of suicidal thoughts; less favourable psychosocial work characteristics, especially in regard to demands and managerial support; lower levels of positive mental well-being; and higher levels of negative work–home interaction. The levels of psychological distress reported suggest ready access to and knowledge of lethal means is probably not operating in isolation to increase suicide risk within the profession.
mental health, veterinary surgeon, depression, anxiety, well-being
1075-1085
Bartram, David J.
b16ac0ee-eb7c-4cde-8c79-5a4d12a7d48b
Yadegarfar, Ghasem
032b05c6-84d0-49b4-ac8c-626279a5824d
Baldwin, David S.
1beaa192-0ef1-4914-897a-3a49fc2ed15e
December 2009
Bartram, David J.
b16ac0ee-eb7c-4cde-8c79-5a4d12a7d48b
Yadegarfar, Ghasem
032b05c6-84d0-49b4-ac8c-626279a5824d
Baldwin, David S.
1beaa192-0ef1-4914-897a-3a49fc2ed15e
Bartram, David J., Yadegarfar, Ghasem and Baldwin, David S.
(2009)
A cross-sectional study of mental health and well-being and their associations in the UK veterinary profession.
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 44 (12), .
(doi:10.1007/s00127-009-0030-8).
Abstract
Background Veterinary surgeons are at elevated risk of suicide, with a proportional mortality ratio around four times that of the general population and approximately twice that of other healthcare professions. There has been much speculation regarding possible mechanisms underlying increased suicide risk in the profession but little empirical research. We aimed to assess the contribution of mental health and well-being to the elevated risk, through a postal questionnaire survey of a large stratified random sample of veterinary surgeons practising within the UK.
Methods A questionnaire was mailed twice to 3,200 veterinary surgeons. Anxiety and depressive symptoms, alcohol consumption, suicidal ideation, positive mental well-being, perceptions of psychosocial work characteristics, and work–home interaction were assessed using valid and reliable existing instruments and a series of bespoke questions previously developed through informal focus groups.
Results Evaluable questionnaires were returned by 1,796 participants, a response rate of 56.1%. The demographic and occupational profile of respondents was representative of the UK veterinary profession. The prevalence of ‘caseness’ (i.e. HADS subscale score ?8) for anxiety, depression, and co-morbid anxiety and depression was 26.3, 5.8 and 4.5%. 5.4% of respondents were non-drinkers, 32.0% low-risk drinkers, and 62.6% ‘at-risk’ drinkers (i.e. AUDIT-C score ?4 for women, ?5 for men). The 12-month prevalence of suicidal thoughts was 21.3%.
Conclusions Compared to the general population, the sample reported high levels of anxiety and depressive symptoms; higher 12-month prevalence of suicidal thoughts; less favourable psychosocial work characteristics, especially in regard to demands and managerial support; lower levels of positive mental well-being; and higher levels of negative work–home interaction. The levels of psychological distress reported suggest ready access to and knowledge of lethal means is probably not operating in isolation to increase suicide risk within the profession.
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Published date: December 2009
Keywords:
mental health, veterinary surgeon, depression, anxiety, well-being
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Local EPrints ID: 148073
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/148073
ISSN: 0933-7954
PURE UUID: 203e23af-03e7-47bf-8193-aabab8cbe1a2
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Date deposited: 27 Apr 2010 10:44
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 01:39
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Author:
David J. Bartram
Author:
Ghasem Yadegarfar
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