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Prev: FAQ 4: Ultra Rapid Cycling
Next: FAQ 5: Medications Used in the Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders
From: HeatherOK on 15 Jun 2007 19:35 FAQ6: "Choosing a Psychiatrist" by Christopher Lapp: Success in treatment of mental illnesses like bipolar condition can hinge on the successful relationship between the patient and the doctor. I firmly believe that people with mental illness should find the most experienced, most accessible physician possible as a prerequisite to the disciplined and thorough going pursuit of the correct combination of drugs and lifestyle changes necessary to maintain a stable mental state. But what is a good psychiatrist? I have, in my treatment uncovered what I believe to be a philosophical set of principles that creates the right relationship between the doctor and the patient: Here are the principles: 1. The doctor must empathize with the patients illness and have an emotional understanding of the drugs and lifestyle changes that the doctor is asking the patient to embark on. An example is the dry mouth and skin some drugs cause, or drooling, and how to treat it. Perhaps suggesting a high fiber diet to offset the constipation resulting from a drug. A doctor should be concerned enough about weight gain from medications to be able to recommend a treatment center, should it become a problem. 2. The doctor should be happy about the success of the patient in treatment and concerned when things don't go well. The doctor should have a personal satisfaction interest in seeing that you do well. It should be expressed as a willingness to spend time researching the correct, perhaps innovative, perhaps conservative alternative to an unsuccessful therapy regime. A doctor once went through fifteen years of medical history to find a drug which was used successfully, but was switched due to some minor side effect, as a replacement to a drug that had failed the patient. A doctor must be willing to do his homework in the course of treatment. 3. He must see his efforts to treat you as his contribution to improving the human condition, and not as a tool to make money regardless of the outcome of the treatment. He must subscribe to the Hippocratic oath. 4. He must communicate the personal responsibilities of the patient toward the treatment and the doctor, and he must be prepared to consistently apply those principles. He must demand you take your medicine, but he must also keep track of the your prescription renewal times and the drugs you are on as part of his service. He must demand you make all appointments on time, but he must also make every effort to not summarily cancel appointments for personal reasons. Heshould demand you tell the truth about your symptoms and side effects and general health and mental state, but he must also be willing to make changes in response to those complaints. 5. In short the psychiatrist must enter into a mutually advantageous relationship with the patient, where treatment, costs and benefits are balanced so the patient gets treated to the highest standards in the psychiatric profession, and the doctor gets compensated for his efforts. That is in my mind the best relationship between a patient and the doctor. ================================================ The current FAQs can also be obtained at http://groups.google.com/. The FAQS are copyrighted by each author. Use and/or reproduction requires prior approval of the author, NOT the moderation team. Please do not contact the moderation team or news group administrator for permission to repost. =================================================
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