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Royal College of Psychiatrists - Celebrating 180 years
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  • Become a psychiatrist

    Become a psychiatrist

    • Choose Psychiatry

      Choose Psychiatry

      • What is psychiatry?
      • How to become a psychiatrist
      • Why choose psychiatry?
      • Career essentials
      • What next?
    • Sixth formers and school students
    • Medical students

      Medical students

      • Becoming a student associate
      • Psychiatry attachments
      • Awards, prizes and bursaries
      • PsychSocs
      • National conference
      • Summer and autumn schools
      • FuturePsych – the student associate magazine
    • Foundation doctors

      Foundation doctors

      • Foundation doctor associates
      • Making the most of your psychiatry placement
      • Opportunities for foundation doctors
      • FuturePsych - the associate magazine
    • Help us promote psychiatry

      Help us promote psychiatry

      • How can I help?
      • Ideas to inspire you
      • Resources to help you promote psychiatry
      • Our strategy
    • Choose Psychiatry: Guidance for Medical Schools
    • Choose Psychiatry
      • What is psychiatry?
      • How to become a psychiatrist
      • Why choose psychiatry?
      • Career essentials
      • What next?
    • Sixth formers and school students
    • Medical students
      • Becoming a student associate
      • Psychiatry attachments
      • Awards, prizes and bursaries
      • PsychSocs
      • National conference
      • Summer and autumn schools
      • FuturePsych – the student associate magazine
    • Foundation doctors
      • Foundation doctor associates
      • Making the most of your psychiatry placement
      • Opportunities for foundation doctors
      • FuturePsych - the associate magazine
    • Help us promote psychiatry
      • How can I help?
      • Ideas to inspire you
      • Resources to help you promote psychiatry
      • Our strategy
    • Choose Psychiatry: Guidance for Medical Schools
  • Training

    Training

    • Curricula and guidance

      Curricula and guidance

      • GMC approved curricula
      • Curricula review project
      • Specialty guides
    • Your training

      Your training

      • Psychiatric Trainees Committee: supporting you
      • Time out of training
      • Training resources
      • Run-through training
      • Prizes and bursaries for trainees
      • Leadership and management training
      • Training less than full time
      • Routes to Registration
      • Cost of Training
    • Exams

      Exams

      • Can I take an exam?
      • Contact the exams team
      • Preparing for exams
      • Applying for your exam
      • Exam results
      • Special notices
      • Exam FAQs
      • A fair exam
      • MRCPsych examinations and COVID-19
      • Webinar: MRCPsych Exam - Changes to exam delivery this autumn
      • Capacity reached for September 2020 CASC
    • Neuroscience in training

      Neuroscience in training

      • About the project
      • Neuroscience events
      • Who is on the commission?
      • Latest news from the neuroscience project
      • Neuroscience history
      • Neuroscience videos
      • Neuroscience resources
    • Information for Local Education and Training Boards (LETBs)
    • Medical training initiative (MTI)
    • Undergraduate education forum
    • International Medical Graduates

      International Medical Graduates

      • Shortage Occupation List
    • Quality Assurance in Training
    • Curricula and guidance
      • GMC approved curricula
      • Curricula review project
      • Specialty guides
    • Your training
      • Psychiatric Trainees Committee: supporting you
      • Time out of training
      • Training resources
      • Run-through training
      • Prizes and bursaries for trainees
      • Leadership and management training
      • Training less than full time
      • Routes to Registration
      • Cost of Training
    • Exams
      • Can I take an exam?
      • Contact the exams team
      • Preparing for exams
      • Applying for your exam
      • Exam results
      • Special notices
      • Exam FAQs
      • A fair exam
      • MRCPsych examinations and COVID-19
      • Webinar: MRCPsych Exam - Changes to exam delivery this autumn
      • Capacity reached for September 2020 CASC
    • Neuroscience in training
      • About the project
      • Neuroscience events
      • Who is on the commission?
      • Latest news from the neuroscience project
      • Neuroscience history
      • Neuroscience videos
      • Neuroscience resources
    • Information for Local Education and Training Boards (LETBs)
    • Medical training initiative (MTI)
    • Undergraduate education forum
    • International Medical Graduates
      • Shortage Occupation List
    • Quality Assurance in Training
  • Members

    Members

    • Supporting you

      Supporting you

      • Psychiatrists Support Service
      • New consultants (StartWell)
      • Mentoring and coaching
      • Revalidation
      • Assessing and managing risk of patients causing harm
      • Leadership and management
      • Working less than full time
      • If a patient dies by suicide
      • Writing clinic letters
    • Submitting your CPD

      Submitting your CPD

      • CPD Submissions FAQs
      • Alterations to CPD during coronavirus pandemic
    • CPD Online
    • Membership

      Membership

      • Members login
      • Receipts
      • Pay Your Subscription
      • Direct Debit
      • Your subscription
      • Grades of membership
      • Benefits of membership
      • Fellowship and other Honours
      • Applying for Fellowship
      • Nominations for Honorary Fellows
      • Nominations for National Honours
    • Your Faculties

      Your Faculties

      • Academic psychiatry
      • Addictions psychiatry
      • Child and adolescent psychiatry
      • Eating disorders psychiatry
      • Forensic Psychiatry Faculty
      • General adult psychiatry
      • Intellectual disability psychiatry faculty
      • Liaison psychiatry faculty
      • Medical psychotherapy faculty
      • Neuropsychiatry faculty
      • Old age psychiatry faculty
      • Perinatal psychiatry faculty
      • Rehabilitation and social psychiatry faculty
      • Faculty job descriptions
    • Devolved Nations

      Devolved Nations

      • RCPsych in Scotland
      • RCPsych in Wales
      • Coleg Cymraeg
      • RCPsych in Northern Ireland
      • Executive Committee job descriptions
    • English Divisions

      English Divisions

      • Eastern
      • London
      • Northern and Yorkshire
      • North West
      • South Eastern
      • Trent
      • West Midlands
      • South West
      • Executive Committee job descriptions
      • NW and NY mentorship
    • International members

      International members

      • International strategy
    • Special Interest Groups

      Special Interest Groups

      • How to join a SIG
      • Adolescent forensic psychiatry
      • Arts psychiatry
      • Evolutionary psychiatry
      • History of psychiatry
      • Neurodevelopmental psychiatry
      • Occupational psychiatry
      • Philosophy
      • Private and independent practice PIPSIG
      • Rainbow SIG
      • Spirituality
      • Sport and exercise
      • Transcultural psychiatry
      • Volunteering and international
      • Women and mental health
      • Special Interest Group Job Descriptions
      • Digital psychiatry
    • Committees of Council
    • RCPsych Insight magazine
    • Publications and books
    • Your monthly eNewsletter

      Your monthly eNewsletter

      • RCPsych eNewsletter February 2021
      • Members' update 11 February 2021
      • RCPsych eNewsletter January 2021
      • Members' update 14 January 2021
      • RCPsych eNewsletter December 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter November 2020
      • Members' update 12 November 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter October 2020
      • Members' update 8 October 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter September 2020
      • Members' update 11 September 2020
      • Members' update 1 September 2020
      • Members' update 14 August 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter July 2020
      • Members' update 10 July 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter June 2020
      • Update 12 June 2020
      • COVID-19 Update 29 May 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter May 2020
      • COVID-19 Update 7 May 2020
      • COVID-19 Update 1 May 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter April 2020
      • COVID-19 Update April 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter February 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter January 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter December 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter November 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter October 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter September 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter July 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter June 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter May 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter April 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter March 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter February 2019
    • Posts for members
    • Public members list
    • Jobs board
    • Specialist and Associate Specialty Doctors

      Specialist and Associate Specialty Doctors

      • A message from the Chair
      • Who are SAS Doctors?
      • How to enter the SAS grade
      • SAS career development
      • SAS doctors resources
      • College SAS training and events
    • President's lectures

      President's lectures

      • Declaration of competing interests (President's lectures)
      • List of president's lectures competing interests
      • Past President's lectures
    • Retired members
    • New Members Ceremonies
    • Obituaries

      Obituaries

      • Submit an obituary
      • Remembering Dame Fiona Caldicott
    • About CPD Online - elearning
    • Supporting you
      • Psychiatrists Support Service
      • New consultants (StartWell)
      • Mentoring and coaching
      • Revalidation
      • Assessing and managing risk of patients causing harm
      • Leadership and management
      • Working less than full time
      • If a patient dies by suicide
      • Writing clinic letters
    • Submitting your CPD
      • CPD Submissions FAQs
      • Alterations to CPD during coronavirus pandemic
    • CPD Online
    • Membership
      • Members login
      • Receipts
      • Pay Your Subscription
      • Direct Debit
      • Your subscription
      • Grades of membership
      • Benefits of membership
      • Fellowship and other Honours
      • Applying for Fellowship
      • Nominations for Honorary Fellows
      • Nominations for National Honours
    • Your Faculties
      • Academic psychiatry
      • Addictions psychiatry
      • Child and adolescent psychiatry
      • Eating disorders psychiatry
      • Forensic Psychiatry Faculty
      • General adult psychiatry
      • Intellectual disability psychiatry faculty
      • Liaison psychiatry faculty
      • Medical psychotherapy faculty
      • Neuropsychiatry faculty
      • Old age psychiatry faculty
      • Perinatal psychiatry faculty
      • Rehabilitation and social psychiatry faculty
      • Faculty job descriptions
    • Devolved Nations
      • RCPsych in Scotland
      • RCPsych in Wales
      • Coleg Cymraeg
      • RCPsych in Northern Ireland
      • Executive Committee job descriptions
    • English Divisions
      • Eastern
      • London
      • Northern and Yorkshire
      • North West
      • South Eastern
      • Trent
      • West Midlands
      • South West
      • Executive Committee job descriptions
      • NW and NY mentorship
    • International members
      • International strategy
    • Special Interest Groups
      • How to join a SIG
      • Adolescent forensic psychiatry
      • Arts psychiatry
      • Evolutionary psychiatry
      • History of psychiatry
      • Neurodevelopmental psychiatry
      • Occupational psychiatry
      • Philosophy
      • Private and independent practice PIPSIG
      • Rainbow SIG
      • Spirituality
      • Sport and exercise
      • Transcultural psychiatry
      • Volunteering and international
      • Women and mental health
      • Special Interest Group Job Descriptions
      • Digital psychiatry
    • Committees of Council
    • RCPsych Insight magazine
    • Publications and books
    • Your monthly eNewsletter
      • RCPsych eNewsletter February 2021
      • Members' update 11 February 2021
      • RCPsych eNewsletter January 2021
      • Members' update 14 January 2021
      • RCPsych eNewsletter December 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter November 2020
      • Members' update 12 November 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter October 2020
      • Members' update 8 October 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter September 2020
      • Members' update 11 September 2020
      • Members' update 1 September 2020
      • Members' update 14 August 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter July 2020
      • Members' update 10 July 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter June 2020
      • Update 12 June 2020
      • COVID-19 Update 29 May 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter May 2020
      • COVID-19 Update 7 May 2020
      • COVID-19 Update 1 May 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter April 2020
      • COVID-19 Update April 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter February 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter January 2020
      • RCPsych eNewsletter December 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter November 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter October 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter September 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter July 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter June 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter May 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter April 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter March 2019
      • RCPsych eNewsletter February 2019
    • Posts for members
    • Public members list
    • Jobs board
    • Specialist and Associate Specialty Doctors
      • A message from the Chair
      • Who are SAS Doctors?
      • How to enter the SAS grade
      • SAS career development
      • SAS doctors resources
      • College SAS training and events
    • President's lectures
      • Declaration of competing interests (President's lectures)
      • List of president's lectures competing interests
      • Past President's lectures
    • Retired members
    • New Members Ceremonies
    • Obituaries
      • Submit an obituary
      • Remembering Dame Fiona Caldicott
    • About CPD Online - elearning
  • Events

    Events

    • Conferences and training events

      Conferences and training events

      • Faculty of intellectual Disability Spring Conference 2019
      • Faculty of Forensic Psychiatry Annual Conference 2020 - Register your interest
      • Section 12 and AC – Update for Trainers - Training Day Course Resources
      • Resilience & Wellbeing Course for SAS Doctors
      • Present State Examination Course 17 April - Register your interest
      • Present State Examination Course 1 September - Register your interest
      • Section 12 and Approved Clinician Training
      • Perinatal Psychiatry Masterclasses
      • Women and Mental Health Special Interest Group Annual Conference
      • Faculty of Medical Psychotherapy Annual Conference 2021 - Register your interest
      • Register your interest - Clinical and Educational Supervisor Training future dates
      • Register your interest - Leadership & Management Fellow Scheme 2021/22 (Trainee)
      • Register your interest - Leadership & Management Fellow Scheme 2021/22 (Trust)
    • Events held by other organisations
    • Terms and conditions
    • In house training

      In house training

      • In house training: working with us
      • Health of Nation Outcome Scales
      • Competing interests
    • Highlights from International Congress 2020 - Webinar Series

      Highlights from International Congress 2020 - Webinar Series

      • Registration
      • Programme
      • FAQs
    • Accommodation List
    • Recruitment events
    • Claiming Expenses
    • International Congress 2021

      International Congress 2021

      • Congress FAQs
      • Exhibition Opportunities 2021
      • Registration
      • Key dates
      • IC21 Keynote speakers
      • Poster Presentations 2021
      • Programme
    • Free webinars

      Free webinars

      • Free webinars for members
    • Speaker guidance for online events
    • Conferences and training events
      • Faculty of intellectual Disability Spring Conference 2019
      • Faculty of Forensic Psychiatry Annual Conference 2020 - Register your interest
      • Section 12 and AC – Update for Trainers - Training Day Course Resources
      • Resilience & Wellbeing Course for SAS Doctors
      • Present State Examination Course 17 April - Register your interest
      • Present State Examination Course 1 September - Register your interest
      • Section 12 and Approved Clinician Training
      • Perinatal Psychiatry Masterclasses
      • Women and Mental Health Special Interest Group Annual Conference
      • Faculty of Medical Psychotherapy Annual Conference 2021 - Register your interest
      • Register your interest - Clinical and Educational Supervisor Training future dates
      • Register your interest - Leadership & Management Fellow Scheme 2021/22 (Trainee)
      • Register your interest - Leadership & Management Fellow Scheme 2021/22 (Trust)
    • Events held by other organisations
    • Terms and conditions
    • In house training
      • In house training: working with us
      • Health of Nation Outcome Scales
      • Competing interests
    • Highlights from International Congress 2020 - Webinar Series
      • Registration
      • Programme
      • FAQs
    • Accommodation List
    • Recruitment events
    • Claiming Expenses
    • International Congress 2021
      • Congress FAQs
      • Exhibition Opportunities 2021
      • Registration
      • Key dates
      • IC21 Keynote speakers
      • Poster Presentations 2021
      • Programme
    • Free webinars
      • Free webinars for members
    • Speaker guidance for online events
  • Improving care

    Improving care

    • College Centre for Quality Improvement (CCQI)

      College Centre for Quality Improvement (CCQI)

      • What we do in the CCQI
      • Quality Networks and Accreditation
      • National Clinical Audits
      • Multi-source feedback
      • Using quality improvement
      • CCQI resources
      • CCQI Who we are
      • Research and evaluation
    • Campaigning for better mental health policy

      Campaigning for better mental health policy

      • The Mental Health Act (MHA)
      • Five Year Forward View
      • Integrated care and mental health
      • Children and young people's mental health Green Paper
      • RCPsych in Parliament
      • Join our Research Panel
      • College Reports
      • Position statements
      • Process for College publications
      • Other policy areas
      • Mental Health Watch
      • COVID-19: Guidance for clinicians
      • The Mental Health Act White Paper 2021
    • Planning the psychiatric workforce

      Planning the psychiatric workforce

      • What we do
      • Job planning and recruitment
      • Our workforce census
      • Campaigning for the mental health workforce of the future
      • Workforce strategy
    • Physician Associates

      Physician Associates

      • About Physician Associates
      • Employing Physician Associates
      • Becoming a Physician Associate
      • Support for Physician Associates
      • Physician Associates network
    • National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health

      National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health

      • About the NCCMH
      • Mental health care pathways
      • Mental health quality improvement programmes
      • Other programmes
      • Reducing restrictive practice
      • National suicide prevention programme
      • Sexual Safety Collaborative
      • COVID-19 Mental Health Improvement Network
      • RCPsych Enjoying Work Collaborative
    • Invited Review Service
    • Public Health and its role in mental heath
    • Sustainability and working sustainably

      Sustainability and working sustainably

      • In your community
      • In your practice
      • In your trust
      • Green care
      • Sustainability scholars
      • About sustainability in mental health care
      • Sustainability resources
      • Working sustainably (old)
    • RCPsych Course Accreditation
    • College Centre for Quality Improvement (CCQI)
      • What we do in the CCQI
      • Quality Networks and Accreditation
      • National Clinical Audits
      • Multi-source feedback
      • Using quality improvement
      • CCQI resources
      • CCQI Who we are
      • Research and evaluation
    • Campaigning for better mental health policy
      • The Mental Health Act (MHA)
      • Five Year Forward View
      • Integrated care and mental health
      • Children and young people's mental health Green Paper
      • RCPsych in Parliament
      • Join our Research Panel
      • College Reports
      • Position statements
      • Process for College publications
      • Other policy areas
      • Mental Health Watch
      • COVID-19: Guidance for clinicians
      • The Mental Health Act White Paper 2021
    • Planning the psychiatric workforce
      • What we do
      • Job planning and recruitment
      • Our workforce census
      • Campaigning for the mental health workforce of the future
      • Workforce strategy
    • Physician Associates
      • About Physician Associates
      • Employing Physician Associates
      • Becoming a Physician Associate
      • Support for Physician Associates
      • Physician Associates network
    • National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health
      • About the NCCMH
      • Mental health care pathways
      • Mental health quality improvement programmes
      • Other programmes
      • Reducing restrictive practice
      • National suicide prevention programme
      • Sexual Safety Collaborative
      • COVID-19 Mental Health Improvement Network
      • RCPsych Enjoying Work Collaborative
    • Invited Review Service
    • Public Health and its role in mental heath
    • Sustainability and working sustainably
      • In your community
      • In your practice
      • In your trust
      • Green care
      • Sustainability scholars
      • About sustainability in mental health care
      • Sustainability resources
      • Working sustainably (old)
    • RCPsych Course Accreditation
  • Mental health

    Mental health

    • Problems and disorders

      Problems and disorders

      • ADHD in adults
      • Alcohol and depression
      • Alcohol and older people
      • Anorexia and bulimia
      • Anxiety, panic and phobias
      • Bereavement
      • Bipolar disorder
      • Cannabis
      • Club drugs
      • Coping after a traumatic event
      • Debt and mental health
      • Delirium
      • Memory problems and dementia
      • Depression
      • Depression in older adults
      • Depression and men
      • Eating well and mental health
      • Feeling on the edge
      • Feeling overwhelmed
      • Feeling stressed
      • Hoarding
      • Learning disabilities
      • Medically unexplained symptoms
      • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
      • Perinatal OCD
      • Personality disorder
      • Postnatal depression
      • Physical illness
      • Postpartum psychosis
      • Problem gambling
      • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
      • Schizoaffective disorder
      • Schizophrenia
      • Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
      • Self harm
      • Shyness and social phobia
      • Sleeping well
      • Perinatal OCD for carers
      • Postpartum Psychosis in Carers
      • Postnatal depression key facts
      • Postnatal depression: information for carers
    • Support, care and treatment

      Support, care and treatment

      • Alzheimers drug treatments
      • Antidepressants
      • Antipsychotics
      • Being sectioned
      • Benzodiazepines
      • Bipolar medications
      • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
      • Complementary and alternative medicines: herbal remedies
      • Complementary and alternative medicines: physical treatments
      • Depot medication
      • Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards
      • Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
      • Electronic health records in mental health services in England
      • Guide to mental health tribunals
      • Liaison psychiatry services
      • Mental capacity and the law
      • Mental health rehabilitation services
      • Mental health services and teams in the community
      • Planning a pregnancy
      • Psychotherapies and psychological treatments
      • Spirituality and mental health
      • Stopping antidepressants
      • Talking to your GP
      • What to expect of your psychiatrist in the UK
      • Antipsychotics in Pregnancy
      • Lithium in Pregnancy and Breastfeeding
      • Mother and Baby Units (MBUs)
      • Children's Social Services and Safeguarding
      • Valproate in women and girls who could get pregnant
      • What are Perinatal Mental Health Services?
      • Mental health in pregnancy
      • Medication for mental health and COVID-19
      • Remote consultations and COVID-19
      • Attending hospital and COVID-19
      • Monitoring health at home and COVID-19
      • Alcohol and COVID-19
      • Eating disorders and COVID-19
      • Perinatal care and COVID-19
      • COVID-19: Self-harm in young people 
      • COVID-19: Self-harm and suicide 
      • COVID-19: Looking after your mental health – for young people and their parents and carers 
      • COVID-19: Using drugs
      • COVID-19: ASD
    • Young people's mental health
    • Translations

      Translations

      • Arabic عربى
      • Bengali বাঙালি
      • Bulgarian български
      • Chinese 中文
      • French Français
      • German Auf Deutsch
      • Greek Ελληνική γλώσσα
      • Gujurati ગુજરાતી
      • Hindi हिंदीहिंदी
      • Italian italiano
      • Japanese 日本語
      • Lithuanian Lietuvių kalba
      • Pashto پښتو
      • Persian (Farsi) فارسی
      • Polish Polski
      • Punjabi ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
      • Romanian Română
      • Russian Pусский
      • Somali
      • Spanish Español
      • Turkish
      • Tamil தமிழ்
      • Urdu اردو
      • Welsh Cymraeg
    • Mental health FAQs
    • Order mental health leaflets
    • About our mental health information
    • Disclaimer about our mental health information
    • Choosing Wisely - a national campaign
    • BSL translations
    • MindEd: web tools for those working with young people
    • Order mental health packs for schools
    • Audio resources
    • Problems and disorders
      • ADHD in adults
      • Alcohol and depression
      • Alcohol and older people
      • Anorexia and bulimia
      • Anxiety, panic and phobias
      • Bereavement
      • Bipolar disorder
      • Cannabis
      • Club drugs
      • Coping after a traumatic event
      • Debt and mental health
      • Delirium
      • Memory problems and dementia
      • Depression
      • Depression in older adults
      • Depression and men
      • Eating well and mental health
      • Feeling on the edge
      • Feeling overwhelmed
      • Feeling stressed
      • Hoarding
      • Learning disabilities
      • Medically unexplained symptoms
      • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
      • Perinatal OCD
      • Personality disorder
      • Postnatal depression
      • Physical illness
      • Postpartum psychosis
      • Problem gambling
      • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
      • Schizoaffective disorder
      • Schizophrenia
      • Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
      • Self harm
      • Shyness and social phobia
      • Sleeping well
      • Perinatal OCD for carers
      • Postpartum Psychosis in Carers
      • Postnatal depression key facts
      • Postnatal depression: information for carers
    • Support, care and treatment
      • Alzheimers drug treatments
      • Antidepressants
      • Antipsychotics
      • Being sectioned
      • Benzodiazepines
      • Bipolar medications
      • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
      • Complementary and alternative medicines: herbal remedies
      • Complementary and alternative medicines: physical treatments
      • Depot medication
      • Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards
      • Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
      • Electronic health records in mental health services in England
      • Guide to mental health tribunals
      • Liaison psychiatry services
      • Mental capacity and the law
      • Mental health rehabilitation services
      • Mental health services and teams in the community
      • Planning a pregnancy
      • Psychotherapies and psychological treatments
      • Spirituality and mental health
      • Stopping antidepressants
      • Talking to your GP
      • What to expect of your psychiatrist in the UK
      • Antipsychotics in Pregnancy
      • Lithium in Pregnancy and Breastfeeding
      • Mother and Baby Units (MBUs)
      • Children's Social Services and Safeguarding
      • Valproate in women and girls who could get pregnant
      • What are Perinatal Mental Health Services?
      • Mental health in pregnancy
      • Medication for mental health and COVID-19
      • Remote consultations and COVID-19
      • Attending hospital and COVID-19
      • Monitoring health at home and COVID-19
      • Alcohol and COVID-19
      • Eating disorders and COVID-19
      • Perinatal care and COVID-19
      • COVID-19: Self-harm in young people 
      • COVID-19: Self-harm and suicide 
      • COVID-19: Looking after your mental health – for young people and their parents and carers 
      • COVID-19: Using drugs
      • COVID-19: ASD
    • Young people's mental health
    • Translations
      • Arabic عربى
      • Bengali বাঙালি
      • Bulgarian български
      • Chinese 中文
      • French Français
      • German Auf Deutsch
      • Greek Ελληνική γλώσσα
      • Gujurati ગુજરાતી
      • Hindi हिंदीहिंदी
      • Italian italiano
      • Japanese 日本語
      • Lithuanian Lietuvių kalba
      • Pashto پښتو
      • Persian (Farsi) فارسی
      • Polish Polski
      • Punjabi ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
      • Romanian Română
      • Russian Pусский
      • Somali
      • Spanish Español
      • Turkish
      • Tamil தமிழ்
      • Urdu اردو
      • Welsh Cymraeg
    • Mental health FAQs
    • Order mental health leaflets
    • About our mental health information
    • Disclaimer about our mental health information
    • Choosing Wisely - a national campaign
    • BSL translations
    • MindEd: web tools for those working with young people
    • Order mental health packs for schools
    • Audio resources
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Bisexual Mental Health

LGBTQI+

19 June, 2020

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By Fiona Watson, RCPsych Library and Archives Manager and Dr Mike Smith, CT2 Psychiatry

As part of our celebrations around Pride Month we would like to draw your attention to one of the less well-known mental health concerns in the LBGTQIA community: bisexual mental health. For reasons that have yet to be satisfactorily explained, many studies show that bisexual people suffer from worse mental health than lesbian and gay communities, although the discrepancy is still not as marked as it is for trans people. 

This blog post attempts to briefly summarise some useful information around bisexual mental health, . We will discuss bisexuality and then move on to the specific issues that face bisexual communities and may be causing some of the mental health problems. Lastly, we will try to offer some suggestions, for concrete actions, we can all take to help. 

On a personal note 

This is a subject we both feel strongly about and we have seen the high prevalence of mental health issues in our bisexual friends, loved ones and wider communities. Some of the themes we’ll talk about further on, such as the likelihood of bisexual people to be ‘out’ to those around them, is played out in our own stories: 

Fiona: I knew I was bisexual from the age of 14 but didn’t come out to my (perfectly accepting) family until I was in my late twenties. I have marched in the London Pride parade twice but have struggled to come out in my workplaces. Not because I think I will face more serious discrimination than the occasional microaggression but because as a bisexual person dating someone of the opposite sex, people assume you are heterosexual. It is difficult to correct that point of view without seeming like you are oversharing. I have also hidden my bisexuality in predominantly lesbian groups out of (likely unfounded) fear of facing biphobia.  

Mike: It took me until my mid twenties to come to accept that I was bi, for a variety of reasons including experiences of homophobia whilst growing up. I’ve been fortunate enough to have a supportive group of bi friends and a generally positive response to coming out from friends and loved ones outside that group. Like many bi people I’ve encountered delegitimising viewpoints about my sexuality; either that I was “actually” gay or that my attraction to men was something that needed to be “fixed”, as one former friend took it upon himself to try to do.  

How many people are bisexual? 

This really depends on what you mean by “bisexual”, as sexual orientation comprises identity, attraction and behaviour and some may have related but different identities such as pansexual, omnisexual or queer. The statistics are different depending on the definition used: 

 

ONS (2018) 

Straight 

Bisexual 

94.6% 

0.9% 

 

Bisexuality Report (2012) 

 

Men 

Women 

Bisexual 

1.8% 

2.8% 

Attracted to more than one gender 

6% 

13% 

Sexual contact with more than one gender 

10% 

16% 

 

From these stats we can see that people who define themselves as bisexual are actually a minority of those that experience attraction to more than one gender. If you experienced attraction to only one member of the same (or opposite gender) in your lifetime would you define yourself as bisexual? If not, how many would it take? What about if you were attracted to more than one gender but it never progressed to a relationship? Considering these questions can help you understand why some people struggle to formulate and communicate their sexual identity. 

 

Being ‘out’ 

Studies show that bisexual people are also much less likely to be ‘out’ to those around them. 75% of gay and lesbian adults say all or most of the important people in their lives are aware of their sexual orientation and only 4% are not “out” to any of the important people in their lives. In comparison, only 19% of bisexual people said they were out to the important people in their lives and 54% are out to some or only a few people. You can read the research here. 

These issues around deciding how to identify and what to tell those around you about your sexuality may feed into the mental health issues bisexual people experience.  

 

Bisexual mental health 

We know that people who identify as non-heterosexual are at higher risk of mental health difficulties compared to heterosexual people, as shown in a 2016 meta-analysis of 12 UK population health surveys. 

But what about bisexuals specifically? Much early research missed out bisexual individuals, by either pooling with other sexual minorities, or by classifying them as homosexual or heterosexual based on the gender of their current partner and this has only recently begun to change. 

What we do have from research is that this is a group with a greater than average burden of mental health issues. Bisexuals have a higher risk of depression, anxiety, eating disorders, suicidality and substance use compared both to the general population, and to lesbian or gay individuals.  

 

Possible reasons  

Whilst lesbian, gay and bisexual people will have many shared experiences, it is worth considering the ways in which being bi is different. Some of the most common points of discussion in bisexual communities are bisexual erasure, bisexual privilege and biphobia 

Bisexual erasure is defined as ‘the tendency to ignore, remove, falsify, or reexplain evidence of bisexuality in history, academia, the news media, and other primary sources. In its most extreme form, bisexual erasure can include the belief that bisexuality itself does not exist’. This idea is often justified by the belief that bisexuality is a phase and people will eventually settle as either heterosexual or homosexual. The 2017 Stonewall report found that three in four bisexual school pupils had never been taught about bisexuality 

Bisexual privilege is the idea that bisexual people have the option to avoid the stigma associated with same sex attraction by ignoring it and pursuing fulfilling relationships with the opposite sex. They do not have to accept the fact that every time in their life they act as a couple in public they will be outing themselves and potentially facing discrimination. On the other hand, “passing” as heterosexual in this way can come at the cost of erasing their own identity and so is a double-edged sword. 

Bisexuality carries stigma (biphobia) in both heterosexual and lesbian or gay communities. This includes negative stereotypes of bisexual people as, for instance, hypersexual, disregarding their sexuality in favour of believing they simply wish to be more promiscuous. They are also seen as less likely to remain loyal in a relationship because they unable to find fulfillment with a partner of only one of the genders they feel attraction for. Surveys have suggested that public attitudes towards bisexuals are more negative than towards lesbian or gay people. However, happily this is shifting to become more positive over time, in line with public perception of homosexuality more generally, at least in the US, where much of the relevant research has been conducted.  

Studies show that this discrimination is linked to poor mental health outcomes. Scores on a tool designed to look at bi-specific forms of discrimination, the Anti-Bisexual Experiences Scale, have been shown to relate to mental health outcomes. 

 Bisexual individuals may also experience internalised biphobia, shame and identity uncertainty stemming from exposure to wider cultural attitudes. They can feel isolated, not gay enough to be comfortable in LGBT communities and yet not belonging to mainstream culture either. Research around acculturation has shown those who split their allegiance between cultures or have no community have worse mental health outcomes. Practically, this may mean, for example, bisexual individuals are less comfortable accessing either mainstream or LGBTQIA mental health services. 

 

What can we do to support bisexual mental health? 

The most basic thing we can do to help bisexual people is to better understand the issues facing them. This is particularly true for mental health professionals, who are figures of authority and may see bisexual people at particularly challenging time in their lives. Bisexuals have reported negative interactions with mental health professionals, such as the suggestion being made that bisexuality is not a healthy, stable identity. Professionals can support their service users by not enacting negative attitudes found within the wider culture. 

Access to bi-specific support can be helpful. As with other sexual minorities, bisexual people can benefit both from support from within the bisexual community, as well as bi-affirmative support from outside of it. Information and resources are available online through groups such as Bi Community News and The Bisexual Index 

Finally, the literature on bisexual-specific mental health is currently sparse, and further work is needed to clarify the reasons for mental distress and disorder in this group, and what can be done to help. 

 

Further reading 

Bisexuality and Mental Health information from Manchester based group Biphoria 

Personal story - Being bisexual and my mental health challenges  

5 common mental health issues if you are bisexual 
 

 

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Library and archives team
Library and archives team

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