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A friend of mine has been diagnosed as bi-polar. She's taking her medicine, but it's not having an affect on her rather paranoidal thinking. She's in her early 30s. Is therapy more difficult the longer the condition remains basically untreated?

2007-01-21 04:05:43 · 5 answers · asked by Al Hickey 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Other - Diseases

5 answers

Absolutely not. Treatment is not necessarily the cure for what ills her. Modern medicine often tends to function only by developing coping measures for the maladies it discovers. And this what individuals do as a matter of course, anyway. What we must focus on is the nature of suffering the condition seems to cause, and then ELIMINATE it with a series of life changes. These changes include, but are not limited to, therapeutic activity. Nothing escapes the agenda: the affected person has no hope of "getting better" unless that person embarks upon a wholesale change in job, place of residence, personal habits and preferences, and yes, even friends. Patient, heal thyself.

2007-01-21 04:51:08 · answer #1 · answered by Baron VonHiggins 7 · 2 1

No - severe bi-polar is treatable only with lithium and then they are drugged out and unable to really relate to you or anything in this world. Weekly confrontational counseling is the only thing that helps and the psychiatrist needs to work to get the optimum dosage of lithium without drugging out the patient too badly. Sever cases are "disabled" for all practical purposes and should be on disability. Treatment and counseling must be by a qualified psychiatrist as any other type of counselor just can't do this properly no matter what anyone says. They do not have enough education. Micro managing of drugs and counseling and demanding confrontational requirements for the patient to reach are musts.

2007-01-21 04:46:07 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not really. Bipolar disorder is the one condition, unlike schizophrenia, that gets worse over time and has nothing to do with whether there is early treatment or not. But, she might need a different medication or a combination. There are several.
Note: I have worked in a psychiatric hospital for years and see it firsthand.

2007-01-21 04:13:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i have not in any respect heard of it worsening with age, yet once you've some type of stressor on your existence then which will be triggering your indicators, even with if the meds were operating ok earlier. if that's the case then merely search for suggestion out of your healthcare specialist about adjusting your meds til you adult males locate what works for you presently. in certain circumstances the recent meds will be non everlasting and often they are going to be everlasting. the most acceptable suggestion is to seek suggestion out of your healthcare specialist about it and be as straightforward as you may with them about all of your indicators. in case you want to keep a catalogue so that you dont ignore some thing. that can help you you adult males get a larger photo of what is going on so as that they diagnosis and meds would properly be as precise as conceivable.

2016-12-02 20:30:53 · answer #4 · answered by picart 4 · 0 0

I am Bi-polar and I feel as if my condition has worsened over the years until it impacted my ability to work and handle stress.

2007-01-21 04:19:11 · answer #5 · answered by Kdude 4 · 1 0

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