I have many years of experience as a therapist in the mental health field and can affirm the reluctance of insurance companies to authorize treatment for personality disorders. However, in most reports I see, the presence of a personality disorder is noted if the clinician believes it's there.
I don't see clinicians as prone to either under or over diagnose personality disorders, but I am sure there are some practice settings where that happens. Bottom line is that the DSM IV TR spells out the criteria for meeting the various personality disorder clusters, and you use those guidelines in making decisions. If the clinician is lazy and relies on instinct or impression to diagnose, rather than use the criteria, well, that's just not being very thorough
2007-08-12 02:31:45
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answer #1
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answered by Pat D 4
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My experience was more that psychiatrists (medical doctors) are reluctant to diagnose a personality disorder. Unlike an affective or anxiety disorder or like schizophrenia, personality disorders are outside of their usual field of work, and are usually not treated with drugs with much success.
A psychologist, a doctor of psychology, thru extensive psych testing, may be able to ascertain whether a person meets the criteria for a personality disorder.
2007-08-11 16:27:19
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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As a mental health professional with 20+ years experience, now retired, I have to tell you that many "doctors", of whatever ilk (M.D., Ph.D., Ed.D., etc.) truly fail to diagnose personality disorders. The reason for this is that a true personality disorder is a very long thing to change, and it won't get cured with medication, and Social Security and many private insurances won't pay for treatment of a personality disorder, so many mental health professionals are much quicker to give a mental illness diagnosis (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorder, etc.) simply because they can get more money from the financial pools I've cited above, and personality disorders are harder to "correct". I like to say that I'm very quick to diagnose a personality disorder IF I SEE ONE. And I emphasize that because, as I said above, the big pools of money won't be forthcoming, and many people with personality disorders don't have the money and don't want to spend the amount of money it takes to correct one. And I find it extremely unethical and just professionally cheap to diagnose one way when, in fact, it's something else, simply because one was too "chicken" to deal with the hard facts instead of just drugging someone for some "easy money". God Bless you.
2007-08-11 15:08:20
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answer #3
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answered by ? 7
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Yeah thats what scares me. I really do think I have a personality disorder 4 real. I have a lot of symptoms of the borderline personality, but Im afraid they arent gonna diagnose me with the right thing.
2007-08-11 19:10:44
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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you know why they over diagnose you? because mental and emotional disorders aren't even properly understood. the only person who truly knows what you are going through are other people like you. until doctors fully understand these disorders they can only work with what they think they know about them.
2007-08-11 15:09:01
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answer #5
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answered by . 1
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My #a million is: Avoidant character sickness My #2 is: Obsessive Compulsive character sickness . My #3 is: Schizoid character sickness My #4 is: Borderline character sickness My #5 is: Dependant character sickness My #6 is: Paranoid character sickness My #7 is: Narcissistic character sickness My #8 is: Schizotypal character sickness My #9 is: Anti-Social character sickness My #10 is: Histrionic character sickness
2016-10-02 03:26:24
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answer #6
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answered by kianes 4
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Hello Realm. I think most mental illnesses symptoms overlap. Whether it´s depression, panic attacks, schizophrenia, bipolar, anxiety, ptsd, etc. Most of them are caused by an imbalance in brain neurotrasmiters and symptoms often include: lack of concentration, lack of energy, feelings of worthlessness, etc. They are usually treated by these meds that regulate the brain neurotrasmiters. I agree that doctors fit them into different labels. It is also important to analyze the spiritual explanation of mental illnesses....they are caused by spirits that attach to the person´s aura. This is why acupuncture tries to cure mental illnesses from another perspective and they are other things to improve the symptoms of mental illnesses such as yoga. Argentox2@yahoo.com
2007-08-11 17:05:31
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answer #7
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answered by Lisa 4
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Why does this sound like you're asking us one of your midterm questions?
2007-08-14 20:11:12
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answer #8
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answered by alynn1741 1
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doctors have a name for every personality trait there is. if you have a good personality, you're overly happy and optimistic. if you tend to be down more often, you have depression. if you get mad easily, you're bipoloar
2007-08-11 14:57:03
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answer #9
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answered by Shay 3
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http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/TheOpenDoorForsupport/
2007-08-11 14:59:01
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answer #10
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answered by Dollbaby 3
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