London Doctor details shocking statistics of nurse suicides

It's claimed more nurses are reaching out for help over suicidal thoughts

More nurses are reaching out for help over suicidal thoughts
Author: Martha TipperPublished 5th Jun 2024

A London Doctor has described the fact that one nurse a week is dying by suicide as shocking.

The figures from the British Medical Association also says a doctor is dying by suicide every three weeks.

Dr Chaand Nagpaul is a former head of the BMA and a trustee of mental health charity Doctors in Distress

“There is mental illness amongst healthcare workers and there should be no shame to say that someone may be suffering from depression or anxiety. But what you find is that there is a reluctance often to be open, and as a result, you suffer in silence.”

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said there has been a 54% increase since November in nursing staff contacting its advice line saying they are struggling with suicidal feelings.

The RCN said the number of times it was being contacted over the issue has gone from seven a month in April 2022 to every single day in the same month this year.

An analysis of data from the RCN's counselling service was said to show a direct link between suicidal thoughts and workplace pressures.

More than two-thirds of nursing staff contacting the RCN said workplace pressure was a key factor behind why they were seeking help, as well as working relationships, bullying and harassment, and work-life balance.

The RCN is urging governments and political parties to commit to funding mental health support for all nursing staff, and called for an end to the culture of mental health stigma that prevents people from seeking help.

Acting general secretary Professor Nicola Ranger said: "It should be a moment of great shame that nursing staff are being pushed so hard at work that they feel suicidal.

"Ministers and health leaders have allowed this mental health crisis to grow.

"Widespread workforce shortages and high demand for services have left nursing staff sacrificing their own welfare to care for patients. Intolerable levels of stress have become the norm rather than the exception. It is unacceptable.

"In every setting, nursing staff are suffering but governments and health leaders aren't paying attention. NHS staff desperately need properly funded mental health support and for the underlying drivers of poor mental health, such as workforce pressures, to be tackled. The time to act is now."

Hannah Cadogan, a nurse and a member of the RCN's Suicide Prevention Steering Group, said: "Back in 2007 when I was first sectioned under the Mental Health Act as a nurse with suicidal ideation, my experience was that not many people were open about mental health difficulties, and certainly not in the world of nursing which was extremely isolating.

"The fact that nurses are contacting the RCN to share how they are really feeling is for me a step forward but this information needs to be acted on so that nurses are adequately supported with understanding - they can then, hopefully, continue to compassionately care for their patients effectively."

The Samaritans can be contacted on 116123

First for all the latest news from across the UK every hour on Hits Radio on DAB, at hitsradio.co.uk and on the Hits Radio app.