Submitted by Mighty_L_LORT t3_1148s58 in nottheonion
jppianoguy t1_j8v43jh wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Woman posed as doctor for almost 20 years with fake documents by Mighty_L_LORT
Paywall, but this appears to be an interview with a psychotherapist.
Psychiatrists are actual MDs, not psychologists or therapists. Pretty sure they study the brain as well as the other systems in the body. They don't specialize in the brain itself (that would be a neurologist).
[deleted] t1_j8v4i4s wrote
[deleted]
[deleted] t1_j8v7n2x wrote
[deleted]
Agouti t1_j8vo74p wrote
lol have you even read that paper
It's talking about psychiatric labels from the DSM, not psychiatry as a profession
Seems like you are due for a few DSM labels if your own
[deleted] t1_j8vpvbg wrote
[removed]
Cindexxx t1_j8vtcva wrote
He has so me point, but I don't really agree. Psychiatry helps a lot of people but it's basically a guessing game. Following the source from the link shared gave me this quote which makes a hilarious (to me) point.
>Young et al. (2014) memorably calculate that in the DSM-5 there are 270 million combinations of symptoms that would meet the criteria for both PTSD and major depressive disorder, and when five other commonly made diagnoses are seen alongside these two, this figure rises to one quintillion symptom combinations - more than the number of stars in the Milky Way
Kinda shitty lol.
comradoge t1_j8w16x4 wrote
It is a guessing game because of the nature of the complaints. When your back hurts it is not normal, that is easy to decide. But you have no motivation towards life? This complicates things by orders of magnitude. Maybe you are naturally born that way, maybe you had certain traumas, maybe you had no particular trauma but your upbringing lead you that way slowly, maybe you had shitty friends or family... List goes on. It is even harder for deciding what is normal and what is not. How much sadness or joy should counted as pathological and under what conditions?
Psychiatry has the most subjective organ of interest of all fields in medicine.
Agouti t1_j8z01lf wrote
There has been a lot of criticism of the DSM over the years, most of it justified. Labels like "borderline personality disorder" are almost so vague as to be unhelpful.
At the same time, nobody has come up with anything better. There is so much nuance that simple labels can never capture what is really going on.
If you wanted to really accurately capture someone's personality you would need dozens of scales, 0-100, like a sadistic variant of a table-top RPG. Many of these sliders would have similar competing effects, and any test you gave would never be able to single out a single value. Then, on top of that, people actively hide and deceive the real answers to questions, and the answers might change significantly from day to day.
The key takeaway here is that you can't self diagnose or treat using labels from the DSM or (even worse) western pop psy. Practicing self awareness, finding someone you trust enough to talk honestly with, and if feasible a really good psychologist (because there are plenty of mediocre ones out there, too) is more important.
Eric1491625 t1_j8w37n5 wrote
>FOR 20 YEARS!!!
>What more proof is needed?
It was found that 30% of Pakistani pilots had fake licenses without crashing a plane or getting detected, is pilot a bullshit profession now?
A less regulated industry is going to be easier to sneak into, simple as that.
trixayyyyy t1_j8w35nn wrote
Clown with bad reading comprehension
gamerdude69 t1_j8xpb6y wrote
Why you gotta bring clowns with bad reading comprehension into this? That's pure bigotry toward those unfortunate underdeveoped clowns.
SaltyBarDog t1_j8wf39e wrote
I smell a Co$ sock puppet.
gamerdude69 t1_j8xovcn wrote
You're being dense. You said at the end of your message that psychiatrists don't need to study the organ, and then someone corrected you that, yes, they are doctors, so they in fact do study the brain. Do you always get irrational when you're emotional like this? I'll study your brain.
[deleted] t1_j8ybj9j wrote
[removed]
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments