Thursday, July 12, 2012

Blind Leading the Blind

I cringe every time I see this: A patient's counselor or psychotherapist, rather than referring him to a psychiatrist for whatever reason, instead recommends a drug they think has helped some of their clients, and the patient's physician prescribes it, often with no other justification than the fact that the (unqualified) psychotherapist recommended it. From a purely clinical perspective most psychiatric drugs cause little harm, even to those who should take a different drug -- or no drug at all. But in participating both professionals do the patient a disservice. Psychiatrists can make mistakes too, but we bring much more knowledge and experience to the table, and when those not adequately trained play psychiatrist they risk malpractice, and their license to practice.

Occasionally as well, the patient's record will come under scrutiny by a forensic psychiatrist, insurance reviewer or other third party, perhaps related to a claim, a problem at work, divorce, or a disability application. Indications for the drug, as well as adverse effects and therapeutic response can carry substantial implications in such cases, but the reviewing psychiatrist may be forced to discount what might otherwise have been useful in arriving at a determination, often to the detriment of the subject.

Many primary care physicians have sufficient experience to competently prescribe psychiatric drugs, but many non-psychiatric specialists do not. Inexperienced physicians will serve their patients -- and themselves -- better by declining to prescribe psychiatric drugs, and non-physician psychotherapists should let qualified prescribers decide which drugs to recommend to their patients.

5 comments:

  1. Amazing that you believe you are capable of prescribing, with such accuracy, medications for which the "exact mechanism of action is unknown"

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  2. It is amazing. It's the art of psychiatry. If only science gave us more.

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  3. I completely disagree with this statement. Psychotherapists and psychologists are given the same information on psychoactive drugs and substances as psychiatrists are. Granted, they do not have the med school training, but what they do have is actual experience with the client. If anyone is not qualified to be handing out drugs, it is the doctor. A doctor is too easily manipulated to handing out anything whereas a psychiatrist is better capable of understanding the mind to know which drug is appropriate. This is also why there is a movement to allow clinical psychologists to recommend medication. Who better than the person seeing them most often to recommend. In the end, I only agree that the most qualified should be prescribing meds. That may not be the therapist, but in absence of an actual psychiatrist, it is certainly more plausible than a regular doctor.

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  4. I was dying from chronic carbon monoxide poisoning. My psychologist put me on lithium. I said I did not want too. He said it was this or electric shock therapy! He wrote a lithium script and said "do not read the RX insert" I got my blood tested and was to call him. The day I was told to call him he was on a vacation. Long story short..I ended up in the hospital dying from lithium toxicity. I no longer see a psy. Dr .

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