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‘Psychiatry and Songs’: An Appreciation of Dr Niall Crumlish (1974–2025)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 August 2025

Kieran O’Loughlin*
Affiliation:
Newcastle Hospital, County Wicklow, Ireland
Larkin Feeney
Affiliation:
St John of God Adult Community Mental Health Services, Dublin, Ireland
Brendan D. Kelly
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, Tallaght University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
*
Corresponding author: K. O’Loughlin; Email: kieran.oloughlin@hse.ie
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Abstract

Niall Crumlish (1974 – 2025) was a profoundly compassionate psychiatrist, uniquely gifted music journalist, and cherished husband, father, son, brother, and friend. He embodied humility, kindness, and compassion in all he did. Niall qualified in medicine from University College Dublin (UCD) in 1997; obtained membership of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2002; graduated with a Masters degree (MSc) in Transcultural Mental Healthcare from Queen Mary University of London in 2009; and obtained the degree of Doctor of Medicine (MD) from UCD in 2014. During his clinical training, Niall spent 18 months at St John of God Mental Health Services in Mzuzu, Malawi, a country which left a deep impression on him. In 2010, Niall was appointed as Consultant General Adult Psychiatrist at St James’s Hospital, Dublin with the Camac sector where his sense of humour and generosity left a lasting impression on all who worked with him. Niall was an especially gifted writer about music with an unrivalled depth of knowledge and sensibility. He wrote voraciously for Hot Press magazine from 1993 onwards, where his contributions were widely acclaimed. Through his writings in various publications and on his blog ‘Psychiatry and Songs’, Niall created a body of work that is elegant and intelligent, eloquent and heartfelt, intimate and universal.

Information

Type
Editorial
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of College of Psychiatrists of Ireland

Introduction

Niall Crumlish (1974 – 2025) was a profoundly compassionate psychiatrist, uniquely gifted music journalist, and cherished husband, father, son, brother, and friend. Through his writings and interactions with all he encountered, Niall embodied humility, kindness, and compassion. He is deeply missed.

Background and career

Born in Dublin, Niall qualified in medicine from University College Dublin (UCD) in 1997. Following graduation, he worked in general medicine (1997 – 1999) and in various psychiatry registrar positions on the Dublin University Psychiatry Training Rotation (1999 – 2002). In 2002, he obtained membership of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.

In 2003, Niall was appointed Special Lecturer in Psychiatry in St John of God Hospital, Dublin, followed by a period as Stanley Research Fellow with Professor Eadbhard O’Callaghan at the Cluain Mhuire Service and St John of God Hospital (2003 – 2005). Niall led, authored, and co-authored papers about insight and depression in schizophrenia and schizophreniform disorder (Crumlish et al. Reference Crumlish, Whitty, Kamali, Clarke, Browne, McTigue, Lane, Kinsella, Larkin and O’Callaghan2005), treatment of psychosis (Hill et al. Reference Hill, Crumlish, Whitty, Clarke, Browne, Kamali, Kinsella, Waddington, Larkin and O’Callaghan2010), outcomes of treatment (Crumlish et al. Reference Crumlish, Whitty, Clarke, Browne, Kamali, Gervin, McTigue, Kinsella, Waddington, Larkin and O’Callaghan2009), duration of untreated psychosis (Hill et al. Reference Hill, Crumlish, Clarke, Whitty, Owens, Renwick, Browne, Macklin, Kinsella, Larkin, Waddington and O’Callaghan2012a), and insight and neurological dysfunction in psychosis (Hill et al. Reference Hill, Crumlish, Whitty, Clarke, Browne, Gervin, Kinsella, Waddington, Larkin and O’Callaghan2012b). In 2014, he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Medicine (MD) by UCD for his thesis titled ‘Untreated Illness and Eight-Year Outcome in First-Episode Non-Affective Psychosis’.

During his clinical training, Niall spent 18 months (2006 – 2007) as Clinical Lecturer at St John of God Mental Health Services in Mzuzu, Malawi, a country which left a deep impression on him. While living in Africa, he led novel research (Crumlish et al. Reference Crumlish, Samalani, Sefasi, Kinsella, O’Callaghan and Chilale2007; Sefasi et al. Reference Sefasi, Crumlish, Samalani, Kinsella, O’Callaghan and Chilale2008) and with his wife Sharon, established an addiction education group in Mzuzu, which nearly 20 years later, is still active. Living and working in Africa he wrote of his desire to tell the stories of those whom he met:

‘We will ask people to tell us about themselves and their families, and their losses and sadnesses and loves and joys and hopes. We can’t and won’t pre-decide the outcome of any conversation, but we’ll listen for stories that others aren’t hearing’.Footnote 1

This curiosity, authenticity, and compassion remained the hallmarks of Niall’s later writings and clinical work with colleagues, patients, and families.

Following his return from Malawi, Niall worked as Senior Registrar and Lecturer in Academic Psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin and St James’s Hospital (2007 – 2009), and Senior Registrar and Lecturer in General Adult Psychiatry at St Davnet’s Hospital, Monaghan (2009 – 2010). In 2009, he was awarded a Masters degree (MSc) in Transcultural Mental Healthcare from Queen Mary University of London. His thesis, ‘A Systematic Review of Treatments for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder among Refugees and Asylum-Seekers’, was a model of clarity, concision, and compassion. Niall published extensively on this theme (Crumlish, Reference Crumlish2010; Crumlish & O’Rourke, Reference Crumlish and O’Rourke2010; Crumlish & Bracken, Reference Crumlish and Bracken2011; O’Connell et al. Reference O’Connell, Duffy and Crumlish2016). His academic achievements and research interests throughout this time, too numerous to list in full, consistently captured a deeply human perspective on the suffering of the most marginalised in society.

In April 2010, Niall was appointed as locum Consultant General Adult Psychiatrist at St James’s Hospital, Dublin, where he participated in the Dublin South City Primary Care/Mental Health Steering Committee, aimed at enhancing liaison between primary and secondary care. Niall took up a permanent consultant post in the Camac Sector of the St James Psychiatry Service in June 2011, moving from a hospital-based setting into the community, establishing his team at the Inchicore primary care centre. By then a father, devoted to a young family at home, he worked tirelessly in his early years in post to grow and develop the community team.

Always creatively minded, while in Inchicore Niall established weekly multidisciplinary teaching sessions where he encouraged all team members to openly contribute whatever they thought was relevant to working in mental health. Topics ranged from the ethnographic history of St Michaels Estate (where the primary care centre was located), to a discussion on ‘creating joy at work’. Sessions included visits from local agencies, including the addiction services in the canal communities, the St Michaels family resource centre, locally based social prescribers and those working with other minority groups in Dublin 8. These sessions fostered close working relationships within his own team and across a broad network of local services. Niall viewed a close-knit team, with individual members supportive of one another, as essential to the delivery of optimal care to the most vulnerable in society. He brought warmth, openness and humility to his work as team lead, attributes which served to foster a stable and cohesive team dynamic. This team cohesion in turn was a great source of personal support and solace for Niall in later years.

Within the team, Niall’s sense of humour and generosity were a daily inspiration to all who worked with him. Books, albums, and poems were unexpectedly left on desks or sent electronically after something had left its mark on him and he inevitably felt compelled to share his delight. His own home-made brioche bread was received with gusto at informal team gatherings, as was his expertise in choosing crowd pleasing karaoke songs. His one criterion — that they be ‘mercifully short’.

Niall’s mother Mary was a teacher and he continued her tradition in his role as training scheme tutor for five years, where he reconfigured the teaching programme. In this role, he had a particular interest in narrative medicine, a perspective which considers mental illness as not just a cluster of symptoms, but as deeply rooted in the patient’s story. Niall believed that the understanding these stories is crucial for effective care. His novel teaching approach was greatly valued by trainees. He ran a cherished weekly narrative medicine group for trainees in St James’s Hospital, drawing on poetry, music, stories, and art to give a deeply human perspective on suffering. In the months before he became ill, he opened the narrative medicine group to other multidisciplinary staff. On doing so, many spoke radiantly about his infectious enthusiasm and how it fostered group creativity.

Journalism, writing, and ‘Psychiatry and Songs’

Niall was a deeply gifted writer with an unrivalled depth of musical knowledge and sensibility. He wrote voraciously for Hot Press magazine from 1993 until 2005, where his contributions were widely appreciated and acknowledged (Freeney, Reference Freeney2025). He wrote for State magazine from 2009 to 2018. He also contributed articles on various other themes across a range of media outlets, including the Irish Independent (Crumlish, Reference Crumlish2008; Crumlish, Reference Crumlish2019) and Irish Times (Crumlish, Reference Crumlish2013).

From 2015, Niall focused his writing on his blog, Psychiatry and Songs, where his voice found greatest expression. His first blog post was a stinging critique of how mainstream journalism portrays electro-convulsive therapy, a topic about which he felt strongly (Houston, Reference Houston2016). In his blog, Niall wrote movingly about the patient experience of severe depression,

describing it as ‘a painful absence of feeling; it’s a sickening numbness, a hollowness, that brings with it a shocking loneliness’.Footnote 2 He wrote about striving to understand the despair and isolation of people who suffer in this way. This piece, and its unflinching orientation towards those in distress, was the forerunner of a series of wide-ranging, in-depth explorations of the human condition, an exploration conducted primarily through the prism of music.

Niall’s transition from music journalism to work in psychiatry was a seamless one, as his love of music had a deep and enduring influence on his approach to patient care. Throughout his life, music was Niall’s compass and his anchor, the bond that connected him to other people, to nature, and to himself:

‘I realised that I could — indeed had to — bring my own life to the music and have a dialogue with it, rather than ask the music to provide its own protagonist. I began to learn at 33 that the music I wanted to hear was music that was not finished until the listener finished it: it was by design a partly painted canvas, and you had to bring your own brush.’Footnote 3

Niall saw music as a means of communicating the complexity of the human condition in a way that words alone could not. For Niall, music was a means of creating shared experience, fostering empathy, and deepening understanding between him, his patients, his colleagues, and the world around us.

Niall wrote about ‘great music’ as ‘a source of strength’.Footnote 4 Equally, he held that ‘there is no resilience without vulnerability. Music can only provide strength and solace if it is emotionally open and honest enough to let you in […] to where fear and hope and doubt and all the raw human stuff is hiding’:

‘What I mean is something in the music operating at a level I don’t understand, that’s visceral, usually involving sheer beauty, and makes me happy and sad and yearning and centred at the same time.’Footnote 5

Niall wrote about how music gave a voice to the people and stories he encountered every day, arguing that art and, especially, music can lead people to be kinder and more compassionate.Footnote 6 This deep understanding of his own life though music, and its connection to the lives and suffering of those in his care, resonated widely. A colleague, offering condolence following Niall’s death, described his clinical correspondence as containing ‘the most apt and insightful descriptions of the human experience’ she had ever read.Footnote 7 A former patient wrote simply: ‘You were not just a doctor, you were the most kind person […] thank you for saving my life’.

Friendship, kindness, and gratitude

Niall lived in complete accordance with his values: humility, openness, kindness, and gratitude. In all of his encounters, and most notably in the months prior to his death, Niall was never bitter. He dismissed the notion of bitterness outright:

‘Now, I am an inordinately lucky person. Bitterness would be mostly comical […] I’d been landed in hospital with a near future of deep uncertainty and potential calamity. People including me were worried. But I couldn’t locate any bitterness.’Footnote 8

In his final months, Niall wrote and spoke with particular power about gratitude. Unable to express this gratitude adequately in words alone, he again turned to music, linking his blog to the A House song ‘I’ll Always Be Grateful’ - an unconditional expression of heartfelt thanks to family and friends.Footnote 9 This song was chosen by Niall for his funeral and was played movingly by the band’s guitarist, Fergal Bunbury.

In facing his own mortality, Niall was the embodiment of courage. In his last year, he wrote that awareness of death allowed him see even more clearly which aspects of life were the most important to him: ‘love, connection, family, friends, music, nature’.Footnote 10 In truth, these values had always been abundant in Niall’s life, but he felt them even more profoundly in the final months. Again, he turned to music and wrote about how songs performed a priceless service at this time, awakening him to what he referred to as ‘the technicolour intensity of the humdrum here and now’.

It is a challenge to do justice to the impact Niall had on those who knew him. Had his humility permitted, Niall would have said that such sentiments cannot be expressed through words and are best conveyed in music. Through music, Niall lived intimately with joy and suffering, and often shared in the joy and suffering of others, too, as if they were his own. In his writing, Niall created a body of work that is elegant and intelligent, eloquent and heartfelt, intimate and universal. It is a guiding light for all who aspire to live authentically. In one of his later blog posts, Niall provided something of a directive:

‘Be kind, show love when you can, make sure that those you love know you love them, and cast that net as wide as you can. Then you are living well, without regret, and if you live well, then, when it comes, you might, maybe, be as ready as you’ll ever be. Footnote 11

In the end, the beauty and abundance of Niall’s life is reflected not only in his words, but also in how he lived his every waking moment, and the enduring impact he had on his wife, children, family, friends, colleagues and patients. He is deeply missed.

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the generous assistance of Niall’s wife Sharon Brady and his friend and colleague Dr Grainne Flynn.

Competing interests

None.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Ethical standard

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committee on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. The authors assert that ethical approval for the publication of this paper was not required by their local ethics committee.

References

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