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Dr Anthony O'Connor 'I remember the detail of my errors and the guilt and shame I felt are burnt onto my mind'

Dr Anthony O’Connor writes about how doctors make mistakes – and what we can do about creating an atmosphere that’s not about ‘blame and shame’.

MAKING MISTAKES IS the worst part of being a doctor. I have made errors of judgment and technique, committed sins of omission and commission. I have erred through inattention, inexperience, inadequate supervision or equipment.

We doctors work in a charged environment of stress, overwork and constant disruption, a fertile ground for error.

To the best of my knowledge I never caused a patient’s death but I’ve been lucky on several occasions and have had colleagues bail me out on more. Like most doctors I remember the detail of my errors and the guilt and shame I felt on account of them are burnt onto my mind.

I have written before about attention to detail. And that’s important given that I spend a large part of my working week staring down a 2.5mm lens into colons covered in mucus and human faeces looking for things ranging in size from the full stop on your screen to a small wart that might one day grow up and kill someone.

Blame and shame

Medicine has long fostered a culture of blame and shame where we have tried to divide doctors into two groups: those who make mistakes and those who do not. And we believe if we weed out the latter all will be well. This is a fantasy that does patients a disservice. If people can’t open up about mistakes, how can others learn?

How do we get the small voice in the back of the head of the doctor who has erred and, not had it been noticed, to put their hand up and report it?

It won’t happen in a culture where condemnation and calls for resignations, sackings and prosecutions from the fevered hothouses of social media, traditional media and parliaments have become the norm.

In addition, legal advocates for patients harmed by error provide an invaluable and much-needed service but their pronouncements on cases they are involved in should not be treated as independent unbiased analysis by the media and politicians.

Error rates

In Ireland, error in Medicine has been thrown into sharp focus by a number of tragic incidents that have come to light, most recently a lookback review into the work of a locum radiologist (a consultant who reads CT, Ultrasounds and X-Rays) employed in University Hospital Kerry from March 2016 to July 2017.

Numbers can seem cold, but 46,234 scans read by this doctor were reviewed on foot of concerns having been reported of missed diagnoses.

The doctor was accurate 97.04% of the time. Of the remainder 105 (0.22%) had findings of potential concern. Eleven patients (0.023%) were then identified as having a clinically significant unreported finding in the original report which led to a delay in diagnosis and treatment, four of whom have since tragically died.

This knowledge will add to the grief and pain of those affected and it is they who should be at the centre of people’s attention and sympathies.

To provide some context, of the 1 billion scans performed worldwide every year, the day-to-day error rate is estimated to be at least 3-5%. 

We must always strive to reduce error and the circumstances of the individual cases are unknown, but the raw data revealed by this forensic audit has revealed the performance of a locum working flat-out at an understaffed, under-resourced medium-sized district hospital in rural Ireland lies very much at the high end of what is expected.

I understand why medical error arouses strong passions. I am both a patient and a relative myself and I know how medical error feels from those sides too. But if we are to move to a place of accountability, safety and quality improvement then honesty and facts are the keystones.

A frequent frustration for many commentators is talk of systems failures rather than individual culpability when hospitals fall short. Designing systems that minimise the impact of inevitable human error is the life’s work of safety trailblazers.

In a “just culture” front-line staff feel confident to speak up when things go wrong. People are not punished for actions, omissions or decisions which are commensurate with their experience and training, but gross negligence, wilful violations
and destructive acts are not tolerated.

A just culture prioritises patient safety, enables organisations to learn from their mistakes and quietly saves lives.

It would rigorously investigate and see what could be learned from what happened in Kerry but would also notice that the overall error rate was exceptionally low even by the highest international standards and ask what could be learned from that too. A just culture is the only ecosystem that will allow Open Disclosure to truly flourish.

It’s important that everyone understands the limits of the people and the technologies that we rely on for our healthcare. The slow grind of quality improvement is all about attention to detail and we must take it seriously because lives depend on it. The excellent recommendations of the Kerry report are mainly about structures and systems, peer review and audit, as they should be.

They speak of giving doctors dedicated time and space to engage in quality improvement, defining safe workloads, things I found to be cherished when I worked in the US and the UK but is perceived as a waste of time by managers here.

Follow the seanfhocail

Lucian Leape and Don Berwick of the US Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s work is decidedly unsexy: they study the management of healthcare systems, using scientific evidence to improve the trade-off between quality, cost and safety.

But their work is important. Leape’s seminal Error in Medicine paper in 1994 estimated 44,000-98,000 deaths occur annually due to medical error.

Renowned surgeon, author and patient safety advocate Atul Gawande once wrote: “No matter what measures are taken, doctors will falter, and it isn’t reasonable to ask that we achieve perfection. What is reasonable is to ask that we never cease to aim for it.”

Gawande devised a two minute pre-surgery checklist which when implemented resulted in a reduction from a 25% likelihood of missing key life-saving steps in an operation to a 6% likelihood: a 75% reduction in error. Again, decidedly unsexy, but literally lifesaving for a silent multitude of patients.

The first thing that greets you on the Vision, Mission, and Values page of the Leape and Berwick’s Institute for Healthcare Improvement website is this:

There is an Irish proverb that says that ‘When you come upon a wall, throw your hat over it, and then go get your hat’. At IHI, the spirit of this one little saying has inspired many big outcomes.

It will strike many people as ironic that this global leader in patient safety looks to an Irish seanfhocail for inspiration.

The future wellbeing of our health service and safety of our patients demands we take the fruit of their labours and implement them here.

Anthony O’Connor MD, MRCPI is a Consultant Gastroenterologist at Tallaght Hospital.

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47 Comments
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    Mute stephen kavanagh
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:43 PM

    Good article! I think Facebook etc have a lot to answer for in making us feel we have to project to the world a shiny happy image, built on our relationships/holidays/interesting pursuits, as if any of those things amount to real self-contentment. Not to mention how bad it makes people feel who don’t have or do those things.

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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:27 PM

    Yeah but I am a long way from home and i am in contact with relatives who i would not be otherwise (truth be told i would have no more contact with them really if i lived in the same country but there you go)
    facebook has many positive aspects is the point i want to make

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    Mute stephen kavanagh
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:41 PM

    Yeah Facebook is great for that. I’m not dissing it as a whole, just the culture of unrealistic positivity to which it contributes

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    Mute Debi-Nikita Rathbone-Rentzke
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:54 PM

    I really needed to read this… My god, my life seems in bits at the moment.. sometimes for no reason I just start crying… And feel so down and alone and frightened… And yet there is no reason for this.. It’s overwhelming… and so damn confusing..
    Thanks for the article…. I’m going to read it again.

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    Mute Donncha Foley
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    Mar 13th 2014, 8:17 PM

    http://www.mentalhealthireland.ie/finding-support.html – for links to a lot of the services that provide supports. Just thought I’d post it – it’s amazing sometimes how good it is to talk to a stranger. Take care.

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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:32 PM

    This too shall pass….
    Debi – hope things get better

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    Mute Joan Ruud Donnellan-Wijnen
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:51 PM

    @ Debi.. that’s all of us at some stages in our lives.. Don’t despair.. I think most people, whether they admit it or not, suffer on and off like you’ve described… I know I have and I always say to myself … ‘tommorrow will be a better day’….worry/stress/depression is something I really wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy but I think the majority of the population suffer these emotions so you aren’t alone believe me! Great article Journal ..

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    Mute Shanti
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    Mar 13th 2014, 11:20 PM

    The world keeps on turning, it may be on the dark side now, but it has to turn back around to face the sun at some point.
    Change always comes, sometimes we just have to sit tight through the darkness until dawn.

    Make sure to get outside when it’s light, see some good friends, have a laugh (and a cry), eat some fresh foods and get some rest.
    Things have to get better sooner or later :)

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    Mute Debi-Nikita Rathbone-Rentzke
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    Mar 13th 2014, 11:58 PM

    Thanks Dave…. I just hope it’s just a silly phase I’m going through. The article gave me some insight. Really appreciate the kind words.

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    Mute Debi-Nikita Rathbone-Rentzke
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    Mar 14th 2014, 12:02 AM

    Thanks Joan, The article gave me some insight. Really appreciate the kind words. As the article mentions, we’ve forgotten how to make real friends and as a community we’ve lost touch with those around us… But surprisingly there are still so many good and kind people out there… Strangers but yet still willing to say something friendly and kind.

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    Mute Debi-Nikita Rathbone-Rentzke
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    Mar 14th 2014, 12:03 AM

    I think you are a wise person, Shanti :-)

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    Mute Ronan Kennedy
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    Mar 14th 2014, 9:36 AM

    Hey Debi, wow… it’s great you’re so honest. I’m starting to work as a mental skills coach and I’ve been interviewing people and their patterns of thinking etc to get experience. I’d love to interview you on skype if possible? I’ll be using the experience to work with people who have similar challenges so I’d appreciate any help possible : ) Any questions, let me know. Thanks!

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    Mute Paul Roche
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    Mar 14th 2014, 5:16 PM

    Just invite her for a drink Ronan…

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    Mute SeanieRyan
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:41 PM

    Brilliant article.

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    Mute Jeebus xrist
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:47 PM

    Here Seanie, how is it you’ve packed in the trolling in the last few weeks??
    It’s a most welcome development.

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    Mute Tim Stephen Hendy
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    Mar 13th 2014, 8:14 PM

    Excellent article.
    I’m aware it was not said with complete seriousness, but not sure America is really to blame here, we’ve been very quick to raise a whole generation of our own with overly high expectations and inflated self esteem. We’ve also been quick to believe that taking a load of pills is the best way to ‘cure sadness’.

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    Mute Seán O'Sullivan
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    Mar 14th 2014, 1:50 AM

    some pills will make ya very happy Tim , a welcome distraction but they aint legal if you catch my drift

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    Mute Jeebus xrist
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:45 PM

    Happiness as an everyday state of mind is an illusion.
    I’ll settle for contentment every time.

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    Mute Goldberg
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    Mar 13th 2014, 8:19 PM

    The American way of eternal optimism has probably landed the world in the financial mess we’re in. Contentment has a lot to be said for it. People always striving for more tend to never be happy.

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    Mute simon shewster
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    Mar 13th 2014, 8:44 PM

    I can’t agree with you. We were brainwashed to borrow money and consume, banks lended money but for their own gain, Then you have utter pr1cks like inda blaming his fellow countrymen abroad in return for a fat salary and pension.

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    Mute Goldberg
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    Mar 13th 2014, 9:10 PM

    The same was going on elsewhere around the world. We got stung here more as a small country. Watch wall Street 2 – Oliver Stone does a good job of explaining the reason behind the mess

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    Mute Dara O'Brien
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    Mar 13th 2014, 9:13 PM

    The creation of the corporate veil is the real culprit.

    In fairness, whilst I realise that we are paying a huge price for catastrophic eejitism of the highest proportions, I really dont think that you can trace this human development back to Enda Kenny …

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    Mute seamus mcdermott
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    Mar 14th 2014, 10:21 AM

    The American way of eternal optimism was not in evidence in the 50 years I spent there. What I saw was the message that “You’re not quite right unless you get one of *these*! Then you have a chance to be happy. It can be a car, a house, a feminine deodorant spray, glue for false teeth, or Coca-Cola. Doesn’t matter. The message is “You’re incomplete without our product.”
    Didn’t see too many happy faces at the Kennedy’s funerals. At 9/11. At Hurricane Katrina. Those were certainly “This too shall pass” moments.
    Today, Americans are more worried about their future than at any other time I can remember. Enormous debt. Falling currency. Surveillance state/security state. They”re paranoid, inward-turning, and not exactly optimistic. Like the Irish, they’ve lost faith in their institutions–the banks, the government and the church. In God We Fuss should be the new motto.

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    Mute Paula Keatley
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    Mar 13th 2014, 9:19 PM

    Couldn’t agree more. ‘Man was made for Joy and Woe; And when this we rightly know, Thro’ the world we safely go.’

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    Mute Tessa Flaminko
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:44 PM

    Yes i believe sadness is a part of life just as happiness is but should we really be blaming Americans and their “shiny white teeth” for thinking otherwise?

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    Mute Dermot Lane
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    Mar 13th 2014, 8:16 PM

    Well maybe not their teeth, but yes.

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    Mute juicy pants
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    Mar 13th 2014, 9:53 PM

    Great article. It’s a bit of an aha moment isn’t it. What are we doing going around thinking we should be happy every moment of our lives. The pressure to be positive isn’t very positive. Thanks much respect.

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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:37 PM

    all you need is love.
    sounds like hippy shite, but if you know some people love you, you can cope with just about anything.
    Its what i strive to create for my kids anyway

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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:40 PM

    oh and that means giving the people you love your time and your ears – you cannot do this on remote control

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    Mute Roisin O'Connell Hayes
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:08 PM

    Good article . in times of hardship or sadness,I always remind myself that the time and feeling will pass

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    Mute Dara O'Brien
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    Mar 13th 2014, 8:36 PM

    It’s definitely a cultural problem and possibly one informed by religion. Catholicism is based on finding eternal happiness, seeking an eased conscience by confessing sins, the Protestant ethic holds that God rewards the righteous with material goods.

    Culturally, we place importance on challenging authority, valuing freedom of speech over traditional norms.

    Eastern cultures have a more passive outlook and are more accepting of the idea that we are a small part of something much bigger, they place more importance on societal happiness than that of the individual.

    Yes, I know you have outliers such as China (who are racing towards western style caplitalism) North Korea (just facepalm really) etc. But generally, if you’re brought up to accept that life ebbs and flows, you’ll ironically end up much happier by using the tough times as a means of embracing the happier ones.

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    Mute Damocles
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:36 PM

    We need TO accept that.

    Never accept mistakes.

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    Mute Mark Smyth
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:42 PM

    Agee completely, good article. Teaching people distress tolerance skills is important as too many people spend their existences trying to avoid unpleasant feelings which only prolongs their distress.

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    Mute Jeebus xrist
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:49 PM

    ‘Distress tolerance skills’
    Hehehehe, would that be psychobabble for coping??

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    Mute Mark Smyth
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    Mar 13th 2014, 7:55 PM

    It would surely, psychobabble at its finest, took me a long time to learn that..!

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    Mute Dara O'Brien
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    Mar 13th 2014, 8:47 PM

    And a session or two with a ‘life coach’ …

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    Mute Damocles
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:02 PM

    Good fix, journal.

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    Mute Tom Collins
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    Mar 13th 2014, 11:01 PM

    Maybe he did Dara, I presume you will find out all about that in time when your little world of opportunistic sniping online becomes obvious to you that it’s just a finger or a highlight of your clearly mental issue

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    Mute Dara O'Brien
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    Mar 13th 2014, 11:54 PM

    You’re not of the Eastern school of thought then …

    My oh my, there is a huge irony in the total absence of humor in your post in this thread.

    What has you bitter my son? Tell me about your mother …

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    Mute Roisin O'Connell Hayes
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:06 PM

    Good article.

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    Mute Michael Looney
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    Mar 14th 2014, 2:36 AM

    Without the bad times how’s can we ever appreciate the good? Great piece!

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    Mute seamus mcdermott
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    Mar 14th 2014, 10:23 AM

    Exactly, Michael Looney!

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    Mute Diarmuid
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    Mar 13th 2014, 10:39 PM

    :(

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    Mute Ronan Kennedy
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    Mar 14th 2014, 7:43 AM
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    Mute susan_lanigan
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    Mar 14th 2014, 12:12 PM

    Also facile anti-American rhetoric is very unattractive. Of course there are things wrong with the US – but in my experience with American colleagues, they have an honesty and enterprising nature that is lacking in this country. If anything I think we Irish could learn from our friends across the Atlantic: to be more honest, more authentic and less emotionally evasive.

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    Mute susan_lanigan
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    Mar 14th 2014, 12:10 PM

    I find this article a bit tired and minimising, to be honest. Some of us are not just “sad”, we have temperaments which make the vicissitudes of Irish life, itself shot through with injustice and moving goalposts, very hard to bear. I’m not a drummer boy for big pharma, but if we are suffering from mental ill-health and medication helps to stabilise us, then to have recourse to it should not be a matter of penalty. To accuse us of evading the natural rhythms of life is trite, Jesuitical and cruel. And I really don’t see what the internet has to do with it. Of course it can alienate, but it can also bond people together and create wonderful relationships.

    The emotion I am happy to embrace and accept is the one of anger, and this article gives me some. He is calling mentally ill people cowards, and that falsehood makes me growl in the back of my throat.

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    Mute Aine Nibhern
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    Mar 15th 2014, 6:51 PM

    “Despite their continued failure to understand how psychiatric drugs work, doctors continue to tell patients that their troubles are the result of chemical imbalances in their brains. As Frank Ayd pointed out, this explanation helps reassure patients even as it encourages them to take their medicine, and it fits in perfectly with our expectation that doctors will seek out and destroy the chemical villains responsible for all of our suffering, both physical and mental. The theory may not work as science, but it is a devastatingly effective myth” ~ http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/09/psychiatry-prozac-ssri-mental-health-theory-discredited.html

    On a biochemical level to help stabilize mood it is diet that needs to be worked on and exercise etc but there is no magic pill to cure Life ~ http://www.foodforthebrain.org/nutrition-solutions/depression.aspx

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    Mute Paul Roche
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    Mar 14th 2014, 4:33 PM

    Sunscreen.

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