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  #11  
Old 28-07-2006, 01:18 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by anthony
Any doctor that can come up with all that in 15 - 20 minutes with no indepth detail of what the hell has gone on in your life, is full of shit.
My thoughts exactly...and she was very lucky (or maybe I was the lucky one) that I didn't say that to her face!! :angry-fla
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  #12  
Old 28-07-2006, 01:37 AM
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I would have. I could understand, if you are at your worst with PTSD, and with an expert in PTSD and trauma, they would pick you in that time frame, no doubt at all, but if I walked into a doctor now, even an expert, they wouldn't pick me for PTSD, as I am not at my worst. Good decision.
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  #13  
Old 31-08-2006, 05:00 AM
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I think I'm on to a rant...you've been warned.

Your story is the exact reason why I refused to see a doctor for so long about my problems other than depression.

My oldest sister was diagnosed alternately Manic Depressive/Bipolar and Schizophrenic. Personally, I think it MPD, but that's just my observation. Anyway, watching what she went through: hospital to clinic to group home to mental HELLth facility made me afraid for many years to even bother getting any help for myself. Her experiences (and being dragged along to the scenes of the drama by my mother because I was the youngest) made me very cynical about "mental health care" from an early age.

It seems like "doctors" -- as opposed to professionals who are trained to shut their yap and listen to you -- are more than eager to slap labels on you that correspond to what samples the last pharm rep just left. I feel very lucky to have a PCP that actually gives a crap and listens to his patients, not to mention my evaluator was very patient and courteous. It seems that my cynicism is shared by those who are paid to render the services. It burns me up. :angry-fla
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  #14  
Old 31-08-2006, 05:23 AM
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I think that your family doctor is able to handle minor-mild depression cases.

But... as my own GP told me, family doctors usually only have general knowledge about these disorders...
...so instead of him pumping me up with pharm samples, he made me an appointment with some specialist that would oversee the PTSD and other issues, while he could concentrate on what he knows best.

He still writes the priscriptions, as he and the specialists stay in contact.
But by having all my doctors in sync with eachother has made everything so much easier.
They each know what the other is doing, and update eachother on my condition.

At times it makes me feel like a little kid,
but it's just such a relief to have someone take charge!
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  #15  
Old 31-08-2006, 11:15 AM
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Tabitha, have a look at this thread I posted in regard to finding a trauma expert.
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  #16  
Old 31-08-2006, 04:00 PM
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We all meet doctor's occasionally who don't know their ass from their elbow; and I thought they studied biology.

The only comisseration is that even doctor's can have bad days, depression, headaches, divorces, bereavements or anything else.

Going back to biology, she may just be having a bad hair day. Personally, I would get out of her hair fast.
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