The crucial missing point from that following diatribe of yours is your ignorance about how medical professionals arrive at a diagnosis.Let's take a look at one of, if not the most common diagnosis that is given in the United States; DEPRESSION.
As I mentioned earlier - "treat the patient, not the data". Putting it simply, unless you're symptomatic to the point where it's affecting your function - you don't qualify. I might diagnose you with "at risk for" - but that doesn't necessarily mean you're diagnosed "with".
E.g.: A few years ago, my buddy lost his job when the company he was working for tanked. At that time, he was the sole bread winner for his family. He was unemployed for a few months and I remember my wife and I (and a couple neighbors) chipping in to help out (baby sit the kids because they couldn't hire a sitter, do grocery runs, pick up kids from school etc.) Mark was under a lot of stress and he was having a difficult time dealing with it because his father had recently passed away. Did he fit the criteria for "depression"? Yes. Was he depressed? I'm no psychiatrist but I don't think so - but he sure as heck was "at risk for" 'Depression'.
Chef, in my humble opinion - you don't know what you're talking about.These are the most generic kind of questions possible. According to these questions, almost every single person who takes this test could have clinical depression.
Again, the function of "screening tests" is not to "diagnose" but to "identify at risk populations so that early interventions can be performed if needed". Believe it or, the vast majority of medical professionals still believe that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
I don't think so either - but what makes you think you're a "completely normal person"?HAHAHAHAHA, REALLY? So, being a completely normal person qualifies me for "moderately severe depression"...??? No, I don't think so.
Where's that 'BS' flag smiley when I need it?Like I said, every single person who walks into a psychologist's office can't walk out without being diagnosed with something.
*sigh* Chef - seriously, you don't know what you're talking about.... and this is a great example.That doesn't mean that something is really wrong with them though. Psychologists use questions that are designed to have answers which can spun around in order to make it look as though you have a problem.
For example...
When I got my DUI a few years ago, I was informed by my lawyer that it would be helpful for me to get an alcohol assessment. So, I scheduled an appointment with a licensed psychologist to take my assessment. This is one of the questions I was asked...
"How many beers or shots of liquor does it take to get you drunk?"
So, I asked a follow up question...
"When you say 'drunk', do you mean buzzed, drunk or completely hammered?"
His response was, and I quote, "That's up to you."
So, no matter what my answer was, he would be able to spin it around to make it look like I have a problem. If I would've said...
"It takes me 8 beers to get drunk" (taking 'drunk' as 'buzzed"'), he could say to himself that I have a problem. 8 beers only gets him buzzed? He is an alcoholic and needs to seek help immediately.
"It takes me 12 beers to get drunk" (taking 'drunk' as 'drunk'), he could say to himself that I drink too much. 12 beers is way too many beers for someone his age to be drinking. His tolerance is too high. He is an alcoholic and needs to be in rehab.
"It takes me 18 beers to get drunk" (taking 'drunk as 'completely hammered'), he could say to himself that I drink too much. 18 beers is way too many beers for anyone to be drinking. He blacks out, which means that he is an alcoholic who has a severe drinking problem. He needs to be in rehab.
No matter what you say to a psychologist, they can spin it around to make you look like you have a problem. That's not medicine...that's sales.
Ever hear of "open ended questioning" ?
:1orglaughYes, it is glorified common sense.
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that they know things we, as regular people, can not. That's all smoke and mirrors; an illusion. Psychologists are regular people who sit and listen to your problems. Anybody can do that
You forget to mention the little tid-bit that before psychiatrists and psychologists did research on such topics, it WAS NOT 'common sense' (as you put it). In fact, it was with the help of painstaking psych research that lead us to what we now know today: that the vast majority of kids who are sexually abused are abused by their own family members (or members close to the family) and not 'that random douche bag on the street'.
Man, I WISH people would actually have this fantasy and GO TALK to a psychiatrist! Chef - you have no frikkin' clue as to how difficult it is to convince people to go "talk to a shrink". Mental illness is a HUGE stigma in our society.People who walk into a psychologist's office have already made up their mind that they're about to get some sort of miracle treatment that they couldn't get anywhere else. They think that psychologists have some sort of special knowledge that nobody else can have and that they need to visit a psychologist in order to be cured.
Meaning, unless you have surrendered all hope and have exhausted all other options, AA (group therapy) isn't going to help you.
(emphasis in red are mine)Well, in your opinion.You have to want to be there and, in order to want to be there, you have to be desperate; desperate for help, desperate for a cure.
I agree with you. Forcing people to rehab (the law) is quite counter-productive, IMO. What works better are community based initiatives - friends, family, neighbors... people that the pt. is familiar with.People who are forced into AA (via court) never get help at that point. It isn't until they reach the point in their life where they willingly want to be there that it will start helping them.
Psychology and therapy is no different than religion; it only works if you want it to work.
But Chef - why blame pshychiatry or AA? Your argument can be used for ANY of life's medical maladies ... diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease, cancer, smoking, renal failure etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
Is ALL of medical science "glorified common sense" because "unless the pt. wants it, they'll never get any real help?"
Should I stop telling the morbidly obese pt. to stop over eating and consult with a nutritionist and physical therapy so that he can lose weight? I mean, after all, the "patient doesn't want it at this point, so it won't work any way".
Should I stop telling the alcoholic who shows up in my ER every other day at 0800 complaining of "nausea/vomitting" to stop drinking because he's killing his liver and killing himself? Should I stop referring him psychiatry to help him cope with his alcohol abuse? Because, you know ... "the patient doens't want it at this point, so it won't work anyway".
I could give you a hundred more examples...
Maybe you should petition Congress to ban the use of AMA ("Against Medical Advice") forms.
Well, like most layfolk you make the common mistake (borne of ignorance of the facts) of assuming that medicine - especially psychiatry - is all about "pills".FYI - I am well aware that there are psychiatrists that prescribe medicine to their patients in order to help alleviate symptoms which are caused by physical abnormalities in the brain. Sometimes the medicine helps, sometimes it doesn't. I am not denying that there are cases where some sort of help is obtained. But, as a whole, I think it's all just a magic show.
Oooh! And this makes you the expert! Because you spent over 8 years of your life to study the field and earn a DOCTORAL degree in the specialty.I've never read an entire text book on psychology, no. But, while I attended Cleveland State University, I had to take pscyhology courses for part of my prerequistes for my major and
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suicidal thoughts or get them over their childhood abuse.
Chef, you're opinions and arguments on psychiatry are as absurd as it would be if I were to tell you how to run your restaurant (or even how to sharpen your frickin knife) because I worked 2 years in the kitchen of a big restaurant when I was in college.
Pray tell us, Chef - just how do we do that? You DO know that it consists of more than just telling them that "It's ok"... or "I'm here for you"... etc., right?All you have to do to help those people is talk to them. Connect with them. Reach them.
No, no textbook can really teach you that. In fact, no textbook can ever prepare you for real life - don't believe me? Just ask any nurse or doctor or paramedic.How do you reach somebody? By talking and by listening. No text book can ever teach you how to do that.
What helps is guided mentorship after formal schooling - spending quality time with a practicing professional in the field. School lays the groundwork, the basics, the foundation... but for one to mature as a professional; one needs to take all that s/he has learned in school and apply it in the real world under the tutelage of a professional.
Please don't Chef. I realize you're jesting - but please don't.But, hey...maybe I should be a bar stool counselor. It would give me something to do while I play darts.
cheers,