Consult a psychiatrist

Updated on healthy 2024-04-29
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Hello, from your description, your wife's situation is a symptom of obsessive-compulsive disorder, she often has to repeat things, that is because she has a sense of uncertainty in her heart, she can't be sure, you need to say it repeatedly, do it repeatedly, to be sure that she has indeed said it, or has indeed done it, so as to eliminate the anxiety caused by uncertainty in her heart. I don't know how long she has been like this, you can say in detail, if she has been in this situation for a short time, then it is only an obsessive-compulsive symptom at most, and if it has been for a long time, then you need to consider whether it is obsessive-compulsive disorder.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    It seems to be an anxiety disorder, so let the doctor look at his symptoms and make an analysis, but obsessive-compulsive disorder doesn't seem to have frequent tantrums.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Signs of obsessive-compulsive disorder It is recommended to consult a doctor about which one should not be very serious.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Definitely not, the mentally ill person is not self-aware, the doctor can diagnose the patient, it means that the doctor's thinking and behavior are normal, if the doctor is a mental patient, he cannot treat the patient with medicine, but the psychiatric doctor sees the patient, all of them are some patients with mental diseases, and the psychiatrist himself is not mentally ill, is a normal person.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Psychiatrists treat patients equally, and they are all people who need to be cared for and do their duty. If there is a mental problem, the doctor will not be estranged or treated differently because of this.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    First of all, intuitively, I feel that this person's behavior is simply inexplicable, and it is purely the kind that has nothing to look for.

    Secondly, intuitively, there is a great deal of doubt about the authenticity of its self-proclaimed "psychiatrist".

    1. Lack of the necessary skills to be a qualified doctor – listen patiently

    I remember reading psychology books and medical books and seeing that one of the necessary skills to be a qualified doctor is to listen patiently.

    It is very curious that such a person who does not even have the patience to communicate with normal people will have the patience to communicate with mentally ill people.

    2. Lack of objective diagnosis ability as a qualified doctor.

    Later, it was found that the "psychiatrist" (who seriously doubted the authenticity) directly labeled me as a suspect of histrionic personality disorder without any face-to-face communication with me!

    But even I, a layman, know that when communicating with people, words only account for 7% of all information conveyed! 38% comes from voice, and the remaining 55% comes from silent body language!

    Therefore, the probability that this so-called "doctor" can get accurate information only through my words, no, to be precise, just through my fragments, will be far less than 7%, maybe not even 1%.

    If it's just an ordinary person, but as a "doctor", if you use less than 1% of the information accuracy to make a random diagnosis, it may cause death!

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