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todayistomorrow,
There is a difference between continuing to seek diagnosis and treatment and self-diagnosing and letting that influence how others treat you. Yes, Danielson has struggles that deserve diagnosis and treatment. His questioning every move plays into their ideas against him. There is a lot to his story we do not know. It appears he is left out of the information loop. I have first hand experience with doctors who tried to claim I am faking or have hypochondria or am embellishing my condition. At first impression, they were justified in their response. But, I used extensive understanding to show them I had a sound factual basic for my concerns. Most accepted my concerns. If I did not have the knowledge I have, I would not have been able to overcome the malingering/hypochondria label. We fight an uphill battle to get good care. Getting sidetracked with self-diagnosis and paranoia of the diagnostic process only makes the uphill battle harder. |
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Also you have to consider that doctors are biased towards not admitting and recognizing my problems since they are the ones that put me in this condition by forcing me to take antipsychotics, so I cannnot trust them a lot. |
Danielson,
It appears the doctors are not telling you why they are doing what they are doing. They are just doing it, with or without your informed consent. I don't understand how they can force you to take drugs you do not want to take. What leverage do they use? What symptoms are they seeing in you that cause them to force these drugs on you? Are you a minor so you have no final say in your care? I don't understand your comment about MCI vs dementia. Is there a diagnostic difference between the two? |
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They forced me to take them because I was not leaving home awaiting for my PCS symtpoms to resolve, which they labelled as a sign of psychosis. Quote:
-I'm not able to express myself clearly unfortunately. It was a way to say that I'm worried that they will do a superficial test that is not adequate for diagnosing my kind of cognitive problem, and then to use the inaccurate test as a "proof" to reinforce their notion that I'm fine. |
First, There is plenty of internationally recognized concussion information that proves that a concussion can happen without a loss of consciousness. Look at 4.4. Concussion results in a graded set of clinical symptoms that may or may not involve loss of consciousness.
http://www.natajournals.org/doi/full...2-6050-48.4.05 Are you refusing to leave the house or are you refusing to move out and live on your own? It sounds like you are refusing to leave the house. There is no justification for this. Even with severe symptoms, most can take short trips outside the home. What prevents you from leaving the house? You are quite adequate at expressing yourself clearly in some areas. In other areas, it appears more that you do not want to respond to simple questions. What can't you do cognitively? What is the difference between MCI and dementia? How does it change anything? |
[QUOTE=Mark in Idaho;1262676]First, There is plenty of internationally recognized concussion information that proves that a concussion can happen without a loss of consciousness. Look at 4.4. Concussion results in a graded set of clinical symptoms that may or may not involve loss of consciousness.
http://www.natajournals.org/doi/full...2-6050-48.4.05 /QUOTE] I know it, you should tell it to the doctors that says the opposite. Quote:
I was not leaving my house back in december when they forced me to take antipsychotics. The reason was that I was succesfully recovering from my PCS and did not want to risk to have a setback until full recovery, I was fearful of having to go back to square one. Quote:
I have asnwered to every question at the best of my possibilities. Quote:
I also cannot use imagination to picture images in my mind. Quote:
Probably I have done a poor job in my explanation tough, arising confusion |
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I can't stand know-nothings who have never walked a mile in one's shoes with a brain injury. They do not truly understand. I've found that very few understand, and most people don't even want you to discuss your hardships with them. If anything, people will treat you like you're whining, and they'll not be compassionate in the least. Then, when you make a mistake because of the impact of your brain injury, they want to hold you to the same level of accountability as someone who has no disorientation, no lightheadedness, no dizziness, no extreme headaches, etc., etc., etc.
A brain injury SUCKS. It just does. It's a hidden disability, and people treat you like you're not that injured. They expect you to have the same outlook as someone in perfect health. |
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I think that these drugs do more harm than good. My brain felt even worse on drugs that were supposed to make my symptoms better. Oh, they made some symptoms better, but I felt even loopier. |
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If this so called "professional" was actually knowledgeable, he'd likely know that being hit at only twelve miles per hour from behind can do significant brain damage under certain conditions. These injuries often do not show up on MRIs because the damage is at the microscopic level. |
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