I am a clinical psychiatrist, France an I don't know any psychiatrist that would lie to their patient. I do know psychiatrist who when you say, "I am feeling depressed", they will pull out their prescription pad and write you a prescription for your depression. They are what I go the the legal drug pushers.
No interest in finding out the root cause. They know that good one-on-one will get to the root cause of your problem. Then you and the psychiatrist can go about resolving the problem.
Medications only mask the root cause of your problem. By putting you on drugs they know that there is money in it for them as you will always have to come back for a prescription as these medications are addictive.
Sounds to me that you have, "SMI", Serious Mental Illness.
Easier to say the psychiatrist tell lies instead of dealing with the reality of your mental illness.
2006-09-21 16:50:57
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answer #1
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answered by MINDDOCTOR 7
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Did you tell the Psychiatrist that you were hearing voices and hallucinating? He must have gotten it from somewhere because they don't make stuff like that up so you must have told him something like that. Did he put you on any medications for it? I have been Bipolar and have a Psychotic episodes for years. I am on medication and very rarely to I hear voices or hallucinate. I have been on the meds for fifteen years now and they have been the best thing that has ever happened to my mental health. Did he put you on Seroquel or Zyprexa. I mean you must have told him something because they can only go by what you tell them, so you must have told him that. If you are unhappy with him go to see another Psychiatrist for a second opinion but remember be honest or they cannot help you.
2006-09-21 16:36:53
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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When I originally got sick I stayed with the best psychiatrist recommended at a major medical school. After a year, my own child, a physician, recommended I get a second opinion from someone who had a great reputation. He drew the same conclusions, so i stayed with the original doctor. 80% of the battle is trusting your own physician, so go find someone you do trust. I can hardly fault you for letting it bother you.....did you confront him and discuss it??? always remember there are good people in law, medicine, accountants, etc.......and some really bad ones in every walk of life.
2006-09-21 17:47:42
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answer #3
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answered by Cassie 5
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Your question from a few days ago states you experienced this....
"lost my mind 4 years ago. I was delusional. I said I saw things. I wrote a page of jibberish. I believe that i have brief reactive psychosis with a paranoid personality type, but the psychs dont diagnose this anymore. So I guess Im on my own."
I don't know why you're blaming the psychiatrist now. Please keep track of your story.
2006-09-21 16:22:42
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answer #4
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answered by Schmeep 4
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Various reasons, it all boils down to money.
There is a megacorportion, I know the name of it, but they would erase this if I told their name, that gets contracts for psychiatrists and psychology clinics with the vast majority of the top 2000 corporations in the US and many in Canada.
They also contract the psychiatrists to do clinical drug trials. The trials are lies.
So either your doctor is setting you up for your employer, a relative, an intolerant community watch group, or wants to write up the medication your placed on as effective, or combinations of the above.
In the Bible, it is said that on judgment day, sorcerers will be cast into the lake of fire, which burns forever and never goes out.
Crooked psychiatrists, and the crooked drug companies that set them up fit into that group.
Minddoc above is using his vodoo crap magic that comes with the license to give you a label to discredit the truth.
2006-09-21 16:53:12
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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He got his information from you! There would be no purpose to the lie on his part. You are not wanting to hear what 's being said, so you believe it's "a lie". Get help before things get worse. Good luck.
2006-09-21 16:30:41
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answer #6
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answered by KathieJo 5
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I suggest you see another psychiatrist and see if it is something you black out on ( do not remember) In any case do this and make sure the new doctor is not associated with the other doctor. You do not want him to go by the old charts and make a decision on that. Good luck!
2006-09-21 16:20:31
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answer #7
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answered by The_answer_person 5
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hmm alright, I'm not sure I understand your question. He said you were hallucinating visually and audibly...so why did he say that if you weren't? and to whom did he say it? A professional should never lie to a patient, I'm amazed that he deemed it necessary.
2006-09-21 16:38:29
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answer #8
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answered by EW 4
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Who did he tell this lie to? Perhaps if he told you this because he really believes it is true. What would make him/her come to this conclusion. Was it something you said? If this really bothers you I would suggest you get a second opinion.
2006-09-21 16:24:08
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answer #9
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answered by Black Beauty 2
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You answered your own question. Psychiatrist.
2006-09-21 16:46:21
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answer #10
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answered by ? 6
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