4 puta vise nego bilo koja druga struka...i naravno ZENE!
zanimljivo stivo vam saljem tek onako da se zabavljate, bolje to nego da se svadjate... :)
- An Australian study of deaths of veterinarians :
Common causes of stress for veterinarians include working more than 50 hours per week, dealing with difficult clients, and problems with interpersonal relationships. Sources of stress for veterinary students and recent graduates may be quite different from those experienced by established veterinarians, however research is limited on this.
- by a series of United Kingdom studies conducted :
1. Vets have high-stress jobs due to early competition for admission, compassion fatigue, long work hours, oversized client expectations and physician-level economic indebtedness with half an M.D.'s earning potential. The authors suggest that veterinarians' stress starts early and hits hard with fewer rewards than our mirror professions offer.
2. Working solo as so many of us do means greater isolation — hence, the opportunity for more pronounced depression, greater exhaustion and fewer outlets for healthy commiseration.
3. Vets are more comfortable with the concept of euthanasia, convinced as we are of its benefits and desensitized as we may be by our frequent application of this method as a valid way of alleviating suffering.
4. Vets have access to drugs ... hard drugs ... lethal drugs. We can act on this impulse easily ... privately ... quickly. To wit, a full 50% of the U.K.'s male suicides between 1982 and 1996 injected themselves with lethal doses of a common barbiturate, the drug we most often employ to euthanize our patients.
5. Suicide has been proven a contagious disease of sorts, leading smaller communities to internalize the impact with more of the same kind of behavior. So when six U.K. vets commit suicide every year, it makes a bigger splash among the 16,000-strong veterinarians than it might in a less insular community.
And finally, this one:
6. „Typically, entrance to veterinary schools is limited to high achievers, whose personality traits may include neurosis, conscientiousness and perfectionism, all risk factors for suicidal behaviors.”
http://veterinaryrecord.bmj.com/content/166/13/388.abstract