
Diagnostic Evaluation and Treatment
The first step to getting appropriate treatment for depression is a physical examination by a physician. Certain medications as well as some medical conditions such as a viral infection can cause the same symptoms as depression, and the physician should rule out these possibilities through examination, interview, and lab tests. If a physical cause for the depression is ruled out, a psychological evaluation should be done, by the physician or by referral to a psychiatrist or psychologist.
A good diagnostic evaluation will include a complete history of symptoms, i.e., when they started, how long they have lasted, how severe they are, whether the patient had them before and, if so, whether the symptoms were treated and what treatment was given. The doctor should ask about alcohol and drug use, and if the patient has thoughts about death or suicide. Further, a history should include questions about whether other family members have had a depressive illness and, if treated, what treatments they may have received and which were effective.
Last, a diagnostic evaluation should include a mental status examination to determine if speech or thought patterns or memory have been affected, as sometimes happens in the case of a depressive or manic-depressive illness.
Treatment choice will depend on the outcome of the evaluation. There are a variety of antidepressant medications and psychotherapies that can be used to treat depressive disorders. Some people with milder forms may do well with psychotherapy alone. People with moderate to severe depression most often benefit from antidepressants. Most do best with combined treatment: medication to gain relatively quick symptom relief and psychotherapy to learn more effective ways to deal with life's problems, including depression. Depending on the patient's diagnosis and severity of symptoms, the therapist may prescribe medication and/or one of the several forms of psychotherapy that have proven effective for depression.
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is useful, particularly for individuals whose depression is severe or life threatening or who cannot take antidepressant medication. ECT often is effective in cases where antidepressant medications do not provide sufficient relief of symptoms. In recent years, ECT has been much improved. A muscle relaxant is given before treatment, which is done under brief anesthesia. Electrodes are placed at precise locations on the head to deliver electrical impulses. The stimulation causes a brief (about 30 seconds) seizure within the brain. The person receiving ECT does not consciously experience the electrical stimulus. For full therapeutic benefit, at least several sessions of ECT, typically given at the rate of three per week, are required.
"Alternatively, two mental health professionals may collaborate in the treatment of a person with depression; for example, a psychiatrist or other physician, such as a family doctor, may prescribe medication while a nonmedical therapist provides ongoing psychotherapy."
Cathartic Christmas Theory - Purpose in Christmas Junk I am hightlighting here a snippet from the previous Christmas blog: Make yours a Cathartic Christmas A friend of mine couldn't bear to put up decorations. Christmas plunged her into depression. She was trying the AVOIDANCE method by only putting up the bare minimum for her children's sake. Putting yourself INTO Christmas instead, can be a healthy catharsis. Rather than being tempted to put a pillow over your head and hide this Christmas, why not embrace the cathartic nature it offers? Tha Holiday Survival Thought #10 Holiday Survival Thought #10 God spelled backward is dog, which might have something to do with the Son of God being born in an animal stable. SAVING COMPANIES MONEY AND HEALTHCARE COSTS SAVING COMPANIES MONEY AND HEALTHCARE COSTS Filed under: Insurance admin @ 9:29 am The Resilience Formula Anyone crapper speaking the calibre of the Millions and Billions today questionable spent apiece gathering by state and assistance on stress-related illnesses and impact absenteeism. Nevertheless, whatever the fine variety is its BIG! and it is, in the Billions! In a infant round prudence where every strike is important to render survival, governments and state crapper no indi Colts/Ravens Recap . . Sunday, December 9 (8:13 pm) COLTS -- C'mon ... let's just play a game. You'll feel better. . RAVENS -- I don't wanna. Leave me alone. . COLTS -- C'monnnnnnn ... it'll be good for you. Get out and get some fresh air, some exercise. . RAVENS -- I'm so cold. So cold. If you REALLY want to help, hiccup you'll get me some more warm brandy and another hooker. . COLTS -- I think you've had enough brandy and hookers. Now listen, I know last week was tough. But I've been there. I know what you'r
VALKIRIAMAZZONE in doveroso links: G I A L I O Anique 72 ANNY82 Belinlandia Bicio BizioamaNapoli Blog del Genoa Cantantessa79 CINE-R-G REVIEWS & MORE Coccolotto Deep Inside Of You devilkiss DolceLu Dragons don't cry Eliel FallenAngel83 Fatascalza fiordizucca, ricette Gessy Giuly Glo Hope82 io1977 Kaos Emozionale Kate's blog Ketty Kira83 Grafica L'angolo della Lettura Le storie di Laureen Littlepaolino Luna70 memories MicioFetente Misteri sotto questo cielo Mony82 Nerissa77 Paola Paper Heart The Good, the Bad First the good, I won a hat over at Mommymommyland! It is the cutest thing! I have never won a blog contest before. I wish I had more to say on "the good"... I'll separate the two here. *********************************************************************************** The bad... Remember when I mentioned my regret at getting the tubal? I am grateful to the SANE part of my brain that knew another child would be a huge mistake. It's hard enough being a single parent of two children. Yes, I'm
"Health professionals who may prescribe a medication, such as a dentist or other medical specialist, should be told of all the medications the patient is taking."
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