How Can Individuals and Families Get 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, psychiatric social workers, and
psychiatric nurses, can assist in providing the person and 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 (HMOs)
- Offices of family physicians, internists, and pediatricians
- Public community mental health centers
People with bipolar disorder may need help to get help.
- Often people with bipolar disorder do not realize how impaired they
are, or they blame their problems on some cause other than mental illness.
- A person with bipolar disorder may need strong encouragement from
family and friends to seek treatment. Family physicians can play an
important role in providing referral to a mental health professional.
- Sometimes a family member or friend may need to take the person with
bipolar disorder for proper mental health evaluation and treatment.
- A person who is in the midst of a severe episode may need to be
hospitalized for his or her own protection and for much-needed treatment.
There may be times when the person must be hospitalized against his or her
wishes.
- Ongoing encouragement and support are needed after a person obtains
treatment, because it may take a while to find the best treatment plan for
each individual.
- In some cases, individuals with bipolar disorder may agree, when the
disorder is under good control, to a preferred course of action in the
event of a future manic or depressive relapse.
-
Like other serious illnesses, bipolar disorder is also hard on
spouses, family members, friends, and employers.
- Family members of someone with bipolar disorder often have to cope
with the person's serious behavioral problems, such as wild spending
sprees during mania or extreme withdrawal from others during depression,
and the lasting consequences of these behaviors.
- Many people with bipolar disorder benefit from joining 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 (NMHA). Families and friends
can also benefit from support groups offered by these organizations. For
contact information click
here.
Source: National Institute of Mental Health
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