Diagnosing bipolar disorder

DEAR DR. GOTT: What are your feelings about bipolar disorder? It is being diagnosed all too frequently these days. In some cases it appears to be just an excuse for bad behavior.

What are the criteria for a legitimate diagnosis? I know there is the manic phase and the depressed phase but it doesn’t explain some of the behavior of some people I’ve known who supposedly suffer from it.

DEAR READER: Initially, I must say it is sometimes impossible to even attempt to explain or understand the behavior of some of the people around us, whether they suffer from bipolar disorder or not. I guess that is a puzzling fact over which we will never have control.
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Reader offers helpful website for childhood mental illness

DEAR DR. GOTT: I was delighted to see you mention the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) in a recent column. Along that line, please tell your readers about the Child & Adolescent Bipolar Foundation, www.bpkids.org. This is a national nonprofit organization that offers a wealth of information and support for families who have children diagnosed with bipolar disorder or who suspect a child has the disorder though not diagnosed.

DEAR READER: Consider it done.

The Child & Adolescent Bipolar Foundation is, in its words, “a national, parent-led, web-based, 501(c)(3) not-for-profit membership organization incorporated in 1999.” The nonprofit also states that its mission is to improve the lives of families raising children and teens living with bipolar disorder and related condition.

Most people don’t realize that mental illness can strike children and teens just as it can adults. As difficult as it may be for an adult to understand and cope with the situation, it may be doubly hard for a child who also has the daily stresses of social, school and family pressures, not to mention the simple act of growing up, which causes immense changes in mood, hormones and more.

Thank you for writing to bring this organization to my attention. Mental illness needs to be brought out of the dark ages and into the light. Sufferers need compassion and understanding just as those with physical illnesses do.

Daily Column

DEAR DR. GOTT:
I’ve been following your commentary on the professionalism of physicians and happen to have Bipolar disorder. On two occasions, when I was neither manic nor depressed, I went to family physicians for purely physical problems only to have them make comments that I was “one of their crazy patients” and others that were similar. At the time I was too shocked to speak up and ask for an apology.

It seems highly unlikely that either of these doctors would make racial slurs to a patient so why did they feel it was acceptable to make rude comments about a condition I have that is beyond my control?

DEAR READER:
Why these physicians felt it okay to make rude comments in your presence is beyond my comprehension. [Read more...]