How a misdiagnosis sent me to psychiatric hospital | BBC Ideas

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 ส.ค. 2024
  • When Hannah Farrell lost her ability to speak and function, doctors thought she was mentally ill. In fact, her symptoms had a physical cause. Here she tells her story, whilst we explore how our physical and psychological health are inextricably linked.
    Made by Ewa Headley, in partnership with ‪@TheOpenUniversity‬.
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ความคิดเห็น • 28

  • @zach464
    @zach464 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I was emotionally and physically abused by both my parents and older brother when I was growing up. Got bullied a lot all the way through public school in a small farming community in middle America because I was smart and didn't know how to hide it. Started having psych problems at age 17. I was diagnosed with schizophrenia at age 20. I'm now 43. I have found therapy to be almost pointless as no therapist I've ever talked to over the last 23 years even wants to discuss my childhood as soon as they see that schizophrenia diagnosis. As far as hallucinations go, they were always the voices of my abusers but never like out there. When my doctor asked me if I "heard voices", I said yes. I never realized at that point that everyone hears thoughts in their head. These thoughts are what I was hearing. I did have a psychiatrist suggest a more accurate diagnosis could be C-ptsd a year ago. I wish I could have stayed her patient but because of circumstances I had to change doctors when I moved two states away. Long story short, I couldn't work because of crippling anxiety and ended up on disability pension in my late 20s. I wonder if all of this could have been avoided if not for that likely wrong schizophrenia diagnosis. My first psych doctor didn't bother to ask me if I was abused as a kid. Back then I thought physical and emotional violence were normal parts of raising children. It's possible I lost my childhood to an abusive family and my adulthood to a bad diagnosis.

  • @anastasiosdimtsis1
    @anastasiosdimtsis1 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Psychiatrists are never held to account!!

  • @mikeodee1164
    @mikeodee1164 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    misdiagnosis happens alot with mentall illness and alot of health problems

  • @sarahturnbull7610
    @sarahturnbull7610 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    So much for differential diagnosis. Did her doctors really not bother to check for any physical cause before putting her under psychiatric care, not even a stroke?

  • @stella78988
    @stella78988 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Maybe start by listening to the patient and stop assuming all patients lie - they just don't speak your professional language and please stop this habit of making the illness the fault of the patient when it is usually the lack of knowledge and experience that is at fault- it leaves patients with no confidence!

    • @mikeodee1164
      @mikeodee1164 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      very true this happens alot even with psychiatrist this is why many people get the wrong dianosis

  • @josephelias9081
    @josephelias9081 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    After suffering repeated abusive head trauma as a child I have spent decades being diagnosed with various mental disorders whilst simultaneously falling behind in school, withdrawing from basically everything due to extraordinary pain and pressure. Not to mention physical changes to the jaw etc.
    Yet it continues, mental health etc etc

  • @therabbithat
    @therabbithat ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Whatever about knowing more about encephalitis, why would a GP assume something is psycho-somatic or what they used to call "hysteria" without ruling out other causes?
    When people go to the emergency room with severe chest pain, they don't tell them "it's a panic attack, go home and make an appointment with a counsellor".. they check!

    • @josephelias9081
      @josephelias9081 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I suspect it happens quite frequently.
      I have first hand experience of it - abusive head trauma is also under recognised by GPs etc.

    • @dcim4803
      @dcim4803 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I was experiencing severe nutritional deficiencies that eventually stopped me from sleeping. It started to affect my thyroid and got to the point where I was having thyroid storms; increased BP, elevated heart rate and powerful chest pains + pressure. I went to the hospital and they implied it was psychosomatic and anxiety and sent me to the psych ward. It happens sadly. Who knows how many :(

  • @garrybrown3165
    @garrybrown3165 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    The book "Brain on Fire" by Susannah Cahalan, New Your Post writer, describes her own diagnosis of anti-NMDA encephalitis. As a physician, I suspect there are many more misdiagnosed cases of encephalitis. Keep spreading the word. GJBrownDO 1/12/2023 10:30 Eastern

  • @aethylwulfeiii6502
    @aethylwulfeiii6502 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    There seem to be loads of psychological diseases that are being diagnosed as psychiatric: narcolepsy, kleine Levine syndrome, thyroid things, it’s probably the piggery harm beionn no f Diane in medicine is assuming things are psychiatric first, and biological last, when every standard practice says it needs to be the other way round.

  • @abcdefuxkk
    @abcdefuxkk ปีที่แล้ว +7

    drs save many lifes as they ruin sooo many lifes also.. they think they know everything but absoloutyly not .. i learn also in hard way ..

  • @emilyiskawaii2
    @emilyiskawaii2 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Anti nmda receptor encephalitis is extremely rare, so it's understandable how they ended up with a misdiagnosis.

  • @givusabell
    @givusabell 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The autoimmune disorder patient population are full of people misdiagnosed as mentally ill for years, decades, before receiving correct diagnoses. A cursory once over of a patient’s notes is not the same as ruling out physical causes & the idea that NHS psychiatrist routinely do anything more than this is rubbish. Patients of these clinics bear the consequences of poor NHS MH training & its 2nd rate MH services which offer emergency inpatient services for violent & withdrawing patients or being off rolled to GP’s who can only conduct perfunctory medication reviews. Shameful.

  • @lindawiker7286
    @lindawiker7286 ปีที่แล้ว

    Mental illness is one of the easiest to diagnose. The behaviors are TEXTBOOK and don’t change.

    • @mikeodee1164
      @mikeodee1164 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      not true u have not fooled me

    • @mikeodee1164
      @mikeodee1164 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      i had one psyciatrist tell me i was schizoeffective another psychistrist told me i was schizophrenic both psychiatrist only talked to me about 30 min they did not even ask me my symptms u dont fool me i delt with many liars in my life i have no symptoms of schizophrenia

    • @kareendeveraux1847
      @kareendeveraux1847 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yeah, totally easy in your case: cluster b, narcissism, and with it delusions of grandeur. Totally textbook. 😂

    • @mikeodee1164
      @mikeodee1164 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@kareendeveraux1847 i delt with many white middle class american liars none of them ever fooled me none of them ever will