Ten Questions to Ask When Determining A Bipolar Diagnosis

Searching for a diagnosis takes persistence and determination. It is not always easy and implies the need for a professional’s help in pulling together a picture of an illness. Pieces of information from the client are fit with one another like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, each impression a unique piece of the puzzle taken together and creating a unified whole that presents one image, the diagnosis. These images are symptoms.

You can help your doctor by providing information about what you experience. While your doctor knows what questions to ask, you can help the process by being aware beforehand what he will want to know during your appointment. You have already come to the conclusion there is something wrong or you would not have made an appointment to begin with. By thinking about your concerns ahead of time, you can begin to identify what seems odd or unusual about your behavior. If you have a notion what kind of symptoms to look for, you can help narrow down the data that will make a diagnosis.

Here are ten questions your doctor needs answered in order to make a diagnosis:

  1. Are you motivated or anxious more than usual?
  2. Do you have a lot of excess energy?
  3. How are your sleeping patterns – increased or decreased?
  4. Are you irritated or agitated?
  5. Are you blue or in a funk; do you feel depressed?
  6. Do you gain pleasure from your activities?
  7. Are you experiencing behavioral changes?
  8. Have you had any recent conflicts that are out of the ordinary?
  9. Has your appetite changed?
  10. Are you drinking alcohol more than usual?
Acquainting yourself with these questions can help your doctor or therapist get a clearer picture of your mental state and how your mind and feelings are being affected. They may not seem related to your initial complaint, but remember that changes in mood are accompanied by physical and behavioral changes. Pinpointing a specific diagnosis relies on ruling out or taking in factors and providing a beginning point.

The doctor may ask questions designed more to access your reaction in the here and now than the actual data requested. The important piece to remember is that you are seeking help to gain closure, to get treatment following a correct diagnosis. The mental health professional can be an ally in that quest. Give her the benefit of the doubt and trust her expertise to help guide you. You and your doctor are a team. Asking the right questions and giving accurate responses will help forge a bond.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

My psych nurse didn't ask me these questions. The person that evaluated me did. I feel like I wasted my time in my dealings with psych services in the u.k. I have had my life trying to cope with this issue, to no avail.

Unknown said...

I'm 40 years old my doctor gave me lamictal and induced lupus nearly put me in a grave some parents think they know everything what the drugs or without my dad still things on the same person you shouldn't force anybody to take medicine against their will loved ones or not

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