[Magdalen] Drug research.
Jay Weigel
jay.weigel at gmail.com
Mon Aug 29 01:23:54 UTC 2016
I was, for much of my career, ACLS certified, and for ALL of it, CPR
certified. Those aren't board certifications. One can receive certification
in a number of things that are NOT board certifications in nursing, also
(per my brother the MD) in medicine, and in other disciplines.
On Sunday, August 28, 2016, James Oppenheimer-Crawford <
oppenheimerjw at gmail.com> wrote:
> Sorry, but if you don't mean board certified, then what would you mean?
> I've worked with a lot of physicians who were not psychiatrists, yet made a
> serious effort to know their stuff, and I think they did a pretty good job
> overall. We did get a few clinkers, of course, but that's par for the
> course.
>
> Sorry you were offended, since I agree with you.
>
> James W. Oppenheimer-Crawford
> *“A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved,
> except in memory. LLAP**” -- *Leonard Nimoy
>
> On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 9:07 PM, Jay Weigel <jay.weigel at gmail.com
> <javascript:;>> wrote:
>
> > I did not say "board cerified psychiatrists". I said them *and* other
> > doctors who had taken a course in psychopharmacology, passed an exam, and
> > gooten a certification. Please do not misquote me.
> >
> > On Sunday, August 28, 2016, James Oppenheimer-Crawford <
> > oppenheimerjw at gmail.com <javascript:;>> wrote:
> >
> > > It's a dicey business. On the one hand, you're absolutely right: only
> > > board certified psychiatrists ought to be able to prescribe. On the
> > other
> > > hand I can think of two serious considerations here:
> > > First of all, many psychiatric facilities run by the states have a
> > history
> > > of employing MDs who are not board certified. It's not too extreme to
> say
> > > that if only board certified MDs could prescribe, we would not be able
> to
> > > hire the people at the price they are willing to pay. They simply
> > wouldn't
> > > be able to get the personnel.
> > > And the other matter is the rapidly changing pharmacological picture.
> I
> > > recall when I first began to work back in 1975, there were not a lot of
> > > meds available. But that quickly changed. I had kept current on
> > > medications' main purposes, side effects, general dose range, etc., but
> > in
> > > just a few years it became a hopeless case. Every year brought some
> new
> > > validated medication and new protocols. And also, the sudden terror of
> > > retinitis pigmentosa from Mellaril and the general concern about
> tardive
> > > dyskinesia suddenly changed utterly the way medication was prescribed.
> > > Also, we would welcome a new antipsychotic with the hope that this one
> > > might be that magic bullet. And it almost never happened that way. I
> say
> > > this to illustrate how a physician completely up to date and certified
> > in,
> > > say 1990, might quite easily be completely out of touch in just a few
> > years
> > > unless she or he conscientiously takes refresher courses.
> > >
> > > Rehabilitation was a known factor from years back (I still remember an
> > old
> > > film we watched, made in England in the 1950s, which introduced the
> > basics
> > > of what we ended up doing for years), and it gradually gained traction
> > over
> > > time in my facilities. By the time I retired about ten years ago, the
> > > strategy had become medication to stabilize and then a lot of day
> > programs
> > > of various types, designed to build on each consumer's strengths. We
> > > talked about the illness, how the consumer had to understand the nature
> > of
> > > their illness and learn to avoid trigger situations, and move toward
> > things
> > > that helped. Meds were merely a very beginning step.
> > > Early on, I was taught that we expect the psychiatric patient to
> require
> > > constant medication to compensate for their chemical imbalance for the
> > rest
> > > of their lives. As time went by, we found that was simply not true. A
> > > person can be acutely psychotic and then, after a robust rehabilitation
> > > intervention, can learn to live a fairly normal life with reduced
> > > medication. I had the pleasure of meeting and talking to some of these
> > at a
> > > psychiatric rehabilitation convention. I wanted to get these folks into
> > my
> > > facility; there's nothing so powerful as someone standing there talking
> > to
> > > a very ill consumer, saying, "I used to be right where you are now,
> and I
> > > took my meds, talked with my doctor, and went to programs, and today
> I'm
> > > working a fulltime job. You can too."
> > > I've seen some amazing accomplishments too -- folks I really never
> > expected
> > > to leave the facility did in fact get it together with the help of
> > titrated
> > > meds and the right programming. We sometimes were able to do some very
> > > good work.
> > > By the time I retired, most physicians had bought pretty solidly into
> the
> > > rehab model, although the drug companies kept up their promotions,
> > claiming
> > > that certain difficult psychiatric patients could be cured with the
> > > particular pill they were selling that month.
> > > I was hired into a hospital whose Director was a psychiatrist (one who
> > was
> > > deeply committed to psych rehab, but still a psychiatrist). After that,
> > the
> > > head was an administrator who had come up through some other career
> > ladder.
> > > We have all those pictures of those psychiatrists (male, of course) who
> > > used to be the director. Now, the pictures are just as often female as
> > > male, and we have not had a physician director after the one previously
> > > mentioned.
> > > When I was hired in one facility, the sister facility across the county
> > was
> > > still directed by the old style director, and nurses generally wore
> their
> > > whites. I only saw a nurse in whites in the medical clinic. I can
> imagine
> > > that if I were to go to another state, things may well be very
> different.
> > > Sometimes, folks would say that New York State was the best of the
> > best. I
> > > had to wonder, if we were "the best," then how was the rest of the
> world
> > > doing? We certainly had our share of dropped balls...
> > >
> > > So meds still plays an important part, and always will, but it's also
> > only
> > > a piece of the puzzle. Each consumer is a separate puzzle, requiring
> her
> > or
> > > his own special interventions.
> > >
> > > James W. Oppenheimer-Crawford
> > > *“A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not
> preserved,
> > > except in memory. LLAP**” -- *Leonard Nimoy
> > >
> > > On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 11:01 AM, Jay Weigel <jay.weigel at gmail.com
> <javascript:;>
> > > <javascript:;>> wrote:
> > >
> > > > Here in the U.S., only M.D.s may prescribe psychoactive drugs.
> > > > Unfortunately, Drug companies have put big bucks into advertising
> ("Ask
> > > > your doctor if this medication is right for YOU!" blares the TV) and
> > > this,
> > > > plus loose regulations on which doctors may prescribe such, can lead
> to
> > > > some awful messes. IMNSHO, no doctor should be allowed to prescribe
> > such
> > > > medications who has not taken an intensive course in
> > psychopharmacology,
> > > > passed an exam with a sufficiently high score and been certified.
> > > > Furthermore, also IMNSHO, prescription drug advertising should be
> > > outlawed.
> > > > It is coercive and leads to patients who are poorly informed
> pestering
> > > > their doctors for medications which may not be in their best
> interests
> > > and
> > > > are generally very high-priced.
> > > >
> > > > Stepping off my soapbox,
> > > > Jay
> > > >
> > > > On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 12:54 AM, Sally Davies <
> sally.davies at gmail.com <javascript:;>
> > > <javascript:;>>
> > > > wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > For me this is an interesting and helpful thread, aside from the
> > > personal
> > > > > rebukes.
> > > > >
> > > > > As a psychologist who does not prescibe but has to work with
> > medicated
> > > > > patients, I feel confused at the moment regarding best practice in
> > > mental
> > > > > health. There has been so much manipulation and outright corruption
> > in
> > > > > mental health, and the (thinking, reading) public is also confused
> > > > > especially regarding children. Meanwhile MH problems in the elderly
> > > often
> > > > > go undiagnosed or treate.
> > > > >
> > > > > I seldom advise anyone to consult a psychiatrist any more but these
> > > days
> > > > > most of my patients are hospitalised in a general hospital, and the
> > > > > physicians - you would call them internists - often prescribe
> > calming,
> > > > > sleeping and antidepressant medication.
> > > >
> > >
> >
>
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