Training the Psychiatrists

I am sure psychiatrists get all sorts of training, but from the patient's point of view, we want them to be trained to understand our problems. My first therapist ever, after a bad boyfriend breakup, was very helpful to me but she hadn't had cancer and didn't get all that part of my emotions. but she was very helpful to me.After breast cancer, I got a new therapist. She had had breast cancer. She really got that part of me. Then she retired!!!I tried a new therapist who told me about her ailments more than I told her about my ailments. Then I canned her and found a new one. While she hasn't had cancer, its okay because she understands the rest of me and cancer is not currently my main issue. Actually, I need to rephrase that. Cancer is not my main health issue currently. My main health issue is that my health sucks.But I digress. This morning I stumbled across an article from The Psychiatric Times explaining breast cancer to psychiatrists. This is a great idea. It discussing its incidence (12% of women world wide). "To support patients with breast cancer, it is important to understand the trajectory and practical logistics of breast cancer treatment. Psychiatrists should also be aware of possible medication interactions, psychiatric or neurologic adverse effects of treatment, and signs of disease progression—issues that are the focus of this article. "Um, yes, hello! I have spent a lot of trying to manage medication interactions. Because of all my medications, needing ...
Source: Caroline's Breast Cancer Blog - Category: Cancer & Oncology Tags: breast cancer therapist Source Type: blogs