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Getting Help For Bipolar Disorder
Anyone with bipolar disorder should be under the care of a psychiatrist
skilled in the diagnosis and treatment of this disease.
Other mental health professionals, such as psychologists and psychiatric
social workers, can assist in providing the patient and his or her family with
additional approaches to treatment.
Help can be found at:
- University- or medical school-affiliated programs
- Hospital departments of psychiatry
- Private psychiatric offices and clinics
- Health maintenance organizations
- Offices of family physicians, internists, and pediatricians
People with manic-depressive illness often need help to get help.
- Often people with bipolar disorder do not recognize how impaired they are
or blame their problems on some cause other than mental illness.
- People with bipolar disorder need strong encouragement from family and
friends to seek treatment. Family physicians can play an important role for
such referral.
- If this does not work, loved ones must take the patient for proper mental
health evaluation and treatment.
- If the person is in the midst of a severe episode, he or she may have to be
committed to a hospital for his or her own protection and for much needed
treatment.
- Anyone who is considering suicide needs immediate attention, preferably
from a mental health professional or a physician; school counselors and members
of the clergy can also assist in detecting suicidal tendencies and/or making a
referral for more definitive assessment or treatment. With appropriate help and
treatment, it is possible to overcome suicidal tendencies.
- It is important for patients to understand that bipolar disorder will not
go away, and that continued compliance with treatment is needed to keep the
disease under control.
- Ongoing encouragement and support are needed after the person obtains
treatment, because it may take a while to discover what therapeutic regimen is
best for that particular patient.
- Many people receiving treatment also benefit from joining mutual support
groups such as those sponsored by the National Depressive and Manic Depressive
Association (NDMDA), the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI), and the
National Mental Health Association.
- Families and friends of people with bipolar disorder can also benefit from
mutual support groups such as those sponsored by NDMDA and NAMI.
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