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An Improbable Psychiatrist is a powerful and insightful story of mental illness, told through the dual lens of a doctor, who later became a patient. Rebecca Lawrence shares her story of being a doctor and a psychiatrist while living with bipolar disorder. She details her experience of being an inpatient on a psychiatric ward, receiving electroconvulsive therapy, training as a doctor, and navigating the challenges of grief, loss, and family. Through her inspiring story, Rebecca aims to reduce the stigma surrounding mental illness and provide comfort to those who suffer from severe mood disorders and those who care for them. Told through engaging and captivating prose, this book will pull you into Rebecca's world and leave you with the powerful reminder that with the right support and treatment, it is possible to live with severe mental illness. Ultimately, this is a story of hope.
from
Part II
-
Comprehensive assessment and treatment
By
Gertrude Seneviratne, Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, London, UK,
Sue Conroy, Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, London, UK
Edited by
Michael Göpfert, Webb House Democratic Therapeutic Community, Crewe,Jeni Webster, 5 Boroughs Partnership, Warrington,Mary V. Seeman, University of Toronto
This chapter explores how childbirth can contribute to the onset or exacerbation of psychiatric disorder, and discusses the relative contributions of aetiological factors, including biological, environmental and psychosocial factors. Women with mental health problems, unless supports are in place, will have difficulties in caring for their babies. These difficulties may result directly from the mother's illness, from secondary mother-child separations owing to early and recurrent hospitalizations, or from marital problems. Psychiatric disorders associated with childbirth are traditionally divided into three categories, reflecting severity: maternity blues, postnatal depression (PND) and postpartum psychosis. A survey of services for mentally ill mothers and their infants in the UK concluded that there were 'few comprehensive services with specialist knowledge of the impact of mental illness on the baby and older siblings, as well as on the infant's father'. The chapter presents a case example, which illustrates a number of aspects of a perinatal service.
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