Bipolar Disorder Controversy with Medications
(April 5, 2007) -- Medications used to treat Bipolar disorder are
worrying some patients that they will incur medical problems in the future.
While patients voice their concerns, doctors try to present the benefits of
the medications. For some people, the side effects are too much to handle,
and they will refuse treatment. For others, taking medications has become
routine as they vow to take their chances.
When Denise Goren was 13, she began cutting herself to cope with the
stress of everyday life. She called it her scapegoat.
Showing signs of Bipolar II disorder later at age 20, she said doctors
told her that her feelings and actions were based on the feelings and
actions of others around her. Bipolar disorder is a treatable chemical
imbalance describing genetic and neurological intercellular components of
physiological mood disorders, Dr. Juan Rios, a South Florida psychiatrist
said.
Lithium, Depakote and atypical antipsychotics are common forms of
treatment. “I didn’t like knowing that my medication was to treat seizures
when I never had a seizure. I think some of the medication out there is not
100 percent accurate, and that scares me,” Goren said.
Bipolar disorder is not schizophrenia, but a person who has bipolar
disorder can portray psychotic symptoms, Dr. Rios said.
For people with bipolar disorder, being on medication is a lifelong
struggle. It is typical that a person will change medications more than once
throughout their life as well. Medication makes it possible for a person to
function, and it stabilizes moods while organizing thoughts, he said.
“Overall, I trust doctors, but I am still afraid of the side effects the
medication brings,” Goren said.
Medication is always an option. There are no known health issues that
would prevent someone from being able to take some form of medication, Dr.
Rios said.
The disadvantages of being on medication are the side effects that can
occur such as short term memory loss and fluctuations in levels of
alertness.
“A misconception of being on medication is that the person is crazy,” Dr.
Rios said. Samantha Chalal, 21, was diagnosed with mild manic depression and
ADHD in high school. She currently takes Zoloft and Strattera. She believes
her medication works and keeps her from getting too chaotic.
“Patience is very important when dealing with medication. I’ve had
several ‘cocktails’ that didn’t work for me,” she said.
Chalal adds that being diagnosed properly is a long and frustrating
process. “I usually trust psychologists and psychiatrists more than other
types of doctors because I see them often, and their feedback has history
behind it,” Chalal said.
There is a mood disorder questionnaire, published by the Manic
Depression/Depression Association, that is a very practical assessment to
take to diagnose bipolar disorder, which is remarkably accurate, Dr. Rios
said. This is because the test evaluates how a person feels rather than how
a person appears to function.
Symptoms of bipolar disorder may look like straight depression at first,
said Dr. Julie Abrams, a psychologist at the University of Florida Student
Mental Health Center. “When experiencing mania, often times the person will
exude excessive energy, have racing thoughts, have a decreased need for
sleep and become extremely impulsive in nature,” she said.
Stigmas surround bipolar disorder due to a lack of understanding, Dr.
Abrams said. Sometimes a person in crisis just needs a family member to stay
with them overnight.
Hospitalization is good for dealing with psychotic symptoms sometimes,
Dr. Abrams said.
In 11th grade, Chalal went on a field trip to a psychiatric ward. When
she went there, students were talking down to the patients like they were
experiments.
“Society looks at weak people and feeds off of them. It makes me sick. I
feel like psychiatric hospitals have a stigma attached to them,” Chalal
said.
Sometimes involuntary hospitalization becomes an option for people who
are experiencing mania.
Involuntary hospitalization is when a person is taken by a law
enforcement official and kept in the psychiatric hospital for a medical
evaluation. Although the person is usually released after 72 hours, they
might be kept longer if they are putting themselves at risk and deemed
unsafe, she said.
At University Pavilion Hospital in Tamarac Fla., all personal belongings
must be left at the front desk including shoe laces and drawstrings.
All the doors are locked, and only a staff member with a key can open
them. One room called the lounge is where visitors can meet with their loved
ones for about two hours. The people staying in the hospital were a mix of
involuntary and voluntary patients. Some had been there multiple times, and
others had been there for the first time.
When it was time to issue medication, patients would stand in line and
receive the pills accordingly.
Some people threw out the pills, and others hid them inside their mouth.
When a patient refused to take their medication, a nurse would suggest a
shot instead. Taking medication seemed to bring the most aggravation for
patients.
Psychiatric hospitals are not for everyone.
“Hospitals scare me. It basically makes you feel like you’re a guinea
pig. I’ve had friends who were kept in the hospital for a month,” Goren
said.
Source: huliq.com
Last updated: 04/07
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