psychotherapy
Questions for your doctor?
I had a rewarding experience last week when one of my patients asked me a range of excellent questions about their condition. I had just diagnosed them as having an anxiety disorder. This patient was clearly concerned about possible medication side effects, having had difficulties with these in the past, and wanted to know in detail about the type of psychotherapy that would be most likely to help them. I recommended that they read about the illness on the handouts that I printed out for them, and on a number of websites I suggested, before coming back to see me again to decide on a course of treatment. It was pleasing to have a good open discussion about their best therapeutic options, to not need to simply prescribe and undertake a treatment program immediately, and to be able to take the time for the patient to do their own research, and then come back and make a joint decision on the best therapy together. This is the way medicine, in non-emergency situations, should be practiced.
Unfortunately this is not the usual way that physicians practice, partly because it takes more time to communicate and arrive at a mutually agreed treatment plan, but also because most patients still do not really plan in advance what questions they should ask. This leads to doctors still having to second guess what patients want to know when they give them an opinion, and of course they therefore often omit telling patients key information of particular importance to that individual.
Tags: anxiety, anxiety disorder, health, hospital, hospitals, psychotherapy, surgery, treatment, visionRelated posts