#psychiatric-diagnosis-rankings

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Healthcare
fromThe Verge
1 day ago

This chatbot can prescribe psych meds. Kind of.

Utah allows an AI system to prescribe psychiatric drugs, raising concerns about risks and the effectiveness of expanding mental health care.
#therapy
NYC politics
fromCity Limits
4 days ago

Opinion: New York's Mental Health Crisis Demands We Invest in Programs That Work

Scaling and coordinating effective behavioral health programs is essential for creating a continuum of care in New York City.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

7 Lessons for When Your Attempts to Control Outcomes Fail

Many situations contain irreducible uncertainty. No matter how many variables we try to control, we can't reduce uncertainty to zero. It's inherent in the messiness of life.
Productivity
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

People With Bipolar and BPD Struggle in Mental Healthcare

There is a unique kind of pain in losing your mind, not just once, but over and over. Losing your perception of reality, of your emotions, of your closest relationships-both across months and multiple times a day. Knowing deep down that something is wrong but being unable to stop it.
Mental health
Cannabis
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Cannabis is not an effective treatment for common mental health conditions, says review

Cannabis lacks sufficient evidence for treating anxiety, anorexia nervosa, psychotic disorders, PTSD, and opioid use disorder despite widespread patient use for mental health conditions.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Facts About Bipolar Disorder in Older People

Older adults face ageism in mental health services, complicating the diagnosis and treatment of conditions like late-onset bipolar disorder.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Link Between Medicine and Psychology

Mental health significantly impacts heart and brain health, necessitating integration of mental health care into traditional medical practices.
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
2 weeks ago

Sparse evidence for cannabis to treat mental health conditions highlights research gap

A comprehensive review of 45 years of cannabis research finds little to no high-quality evidence supporting marijuana's effectiveness for treating anxiety, depression, or PTSD, despite widespread medical use for these conditions.
Social justice
fromPsychology Today
4 weeks ago

What if Addiction Isn't the Problem?

Addiction's lack of clear definition undermines regulatory efforts against corporations; reframing addiction as a common human state rather than inherently harmful could better address actual harms and protect children from exploitative design.
#adhd-diagnosis
#adhd
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago
Mental health

ADHD and the Motivation That Never Comes

ADHD causes lower dopamine and interest-driven motivation, making unrewarding tasks hard; reframing tasks to align with personal values and rotating strategies improves initiation.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago
Mental health

'You Don't Outgrow ADHD and You Don't Outlast It'

Persistent ADHD into adulthood is associated with worse physical health outcomes: smoking, higher BMI, substance use, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, and increased mortality.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Treating Psychosis: Why We Aren't Hearing Our Patients

Healthcare providers often fail to listen to patients with psychosis, allowing their own anxiety and certainty to override genuine curiosity about the patient's lived experience and perspective.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

When Anxiety Is Really Fear in Disguise

What people call anxiety is often the brain's fear system activating to protect us, sometimes overreacting when no immediate danger exists.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Everyone Deserves Trauma-Informed Healthcare

Trauma-informed care must extend beyond mental health to all medical settings, using principles of partnering, consent, and pacing to honor patient humanity and prevent retraumatization.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How Science Is Learning to Explore Ground Truth

Some clinicians have an uncanny quality. A colleague describes herself and others with this instinct as "witchy"-a capacity to know things about patients they haven't said yet, to follow a stray association to a song lyric or a half-remembered cultural reference and arrive, reliably, at something the patient urgently needed to say but couldn't reach on their own. We see with artificial intelligence these intriguing possibilities for discovery, especially as connections that human beings never would see pop out of apparently unrelated data.
Science
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

How Beliefs About Depression Can Harm

Beliefs about depression's nature significantly impact treatment outcomes, with biological explanations potentially hindering recovery through reduced agency and pessimism.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

On Diagnosis and Formulation

Diagnosis and formulation serve distinct clinical purposes: diagnosis identifies what illness is present through observable symptoms, while formulation explains why it manifests in this particular person.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Needed: Providers Who Can Diagnose and Treat Adult ADHD

Adult ADHD affects 6% of U.S. adults annually and ranks as the second most common psychiatric diagnosis, yet most clinicians lack training in its assessment and treatment.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Misdiagnosed, Dismissed, and Running Out of Time

Autoimmune encephalitis frequently presents with psychiatric symptoms, causing diagnostic delays when patients are initially evaluated by non-neurological specialists rather than neurologists.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Has Therapy Felt Useless? You May Have Been Misunderstood

Some people have excessive self-control causing emotional suppression and isolation, requiring specialized therapy approaches like Radically Open DBT instead of standard emotion-regulation focused treatments.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

You Want a Clinician Who Treats You as Person

Evidence Based Medicine was formalized in the 1990s, largely by Canadian physician David Sackett. Sackett described the goal of EBM is to replace hunches and habits with data and clinical trials. Clinical guidelines were developed involving protocols that tell doctors which drug to prescribe first, what dose to use, when to escalate treatment, and when to refer a patient to a specialist.
Medicine
fromBoston.com
2 months ago

Will 'Psychiatry's Bible' add a postpartum psychosis diagnosis?

Postpartum psychosis often strikes women with no history of mental illness, who in the weeks after giving birth are seized by paranoia or delusions. Emily Sliwinski got home from the hospital after giving birth to her first child three years ago, and almost immediately began spiraling. Her thoughts raced; she was unable to sleep; she began hallucinating that her dog was speaking to her. She became obsessed with solving the national shortage of infant formula, covering a corkboard with notes and ideas.
US news
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Children's Mental Health in the US: An Outsider's View

The Missing Social Unit From middle school onward, American children don't belong to a "class" in any stable sense. They move continuously - subject to subject, room to room, teacher to teacher. There's extensive discourse around respect, equity, and inclusion. But there's remarkably little structured attention to the actual social life of any group. Because there isn't really a group.
Education
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Anxiety as a Symptom of Medical Illness

Anxiety can be a symptom of medical illness or medication side effects, making early physician evaluation essential when anxiety appears suddenly.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

People With Mental Illness Are Too Easily 'Othered'

Anyone who is under psychiatric care, or loves someone who is, may want to read the book The Devil's Castle: Nazi Eugenics, Euthanasia, and How Psychiatry's Troubled History Reverberates Today, by Susanne Paola Antonetta. If you care about history, particularly the history of eugenics, you may be interested as well. The book may offer us more respect for the mind, for consciousness, and its diversity.
Psychology
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Genetic Map Redrawing the Borders of Mental Illness

Five broad genetic families underlie 14 psychiatric disorders, suggesting diagnostic categories reflect shared biological landscapes rather than distinct diseases.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Understanding How Medication and Psychotherapy Work Together

Combined medication and psychotherapy treatment is more effective than either approach alone for depression and anxiety disorders.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Does AI Undermine Clinical Supervision?

An AI-informed supervision is constantly reminded to treat speech as metaphorical and not literal, since humans, including therapy patients, are very good poets and very bad reporters. AI never forgets to inquire why at this moment this thought occurred to the patient. It never forgets to consider projective identification -the communication of an intolerable feeling by getting the therapist to feel it. It never forgets to consider a lose-lose comment during a frame deviation.
Psychology
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

5 Things Therapy Can Do for You (and 5 Things It Can't)

Therapy provides skills and perspectives but cannot create motivation, directly change others, or guarantee specific outcomes; success depends on client commitment and readiness.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Obsessive-Compulsive's Misguided Quest for More Proof

Obsessive individuals seek certainty in choices, but life offers no definitive answers; reassessing decisions and improving relationships provides freedom.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Mental Health and Sickness Benefits: Lessons From History

Mental health diagnoses account for 80% of young people's benefit claims, but evidence shows psychiatric treatments produce minimal symptom reduction without proven long-term employment outcomes.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How Should You Pick a Therapist? What Should You Consider?

Approach initial therapy meetings as interviews to assess therapist fit, checking online presence for red flags and ensuring they specialize in your specific needs rather than claiming expertise in all areas.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

What's Going on With Generic Stimulants?

Some generic amphetamine formulations vary by manufacturer or inactive ingredients, leading to reduced clinical effectiveness for some patients despite bioequivalence rules.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Who Does It Help? It's a Good Question in Mental Health Care

Subgroup and biomarker-guided analyses reveal that antidepressants can produce faster, stronger responses in specific genetic or biological subgroups, reducing trial-and-error prescribing.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Diagnosing Schizophrenia With Machine Learning

Machine learning models trained on clinical text can predict schizophrenia within five years, enabling earlier detection and potentially improving prognosis.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

When a Diagnosis Becomes Your Identity

Diagnosis can reduce shame and enable treatment but should not become an immutable identity that limits curiosity, growth, and personal responsibility.
#psychiatry
#dsm
fromNature
1 month ago
Mental health

Updates to the 'bible' for mental-health conditions will miss the mark - is it time to ditch the DSM?

fromNature
1 month ago
Mental health

Updates to the 'bible' for mental-health conditions will miss the mark - is it time to ditch the DSM?

#schizophrenia
#dsm-revision
fromNature
1 month ago
Mental health

The 'bible for psychiatry' is getting a rewrite: your guide to the next DSM

fromNature
1 month ago
Mental health

The 'bible for psychiatry' is getting a rewrite: your guide to the next DSM

Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

What Is Hope in Mental Health Treatment?

Hope is an active process involving a vision of a better future, imagination, trust, and conviction that a better life can occur despite obstacles.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Clinician's Guide to Addressing High-Risk PHQ-9 Results

High PHQ-9 scores indicate significant depressive symptoms and require immediate, thorough assessment and response, with special attention to item 9 for self-harm risk.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How We Define Psychosis Matters

Psychosis is a spectrum condition where reality becomes confusing or unclear, causing hallucinations and delusions that many people experience to varying degrees.
Mental health
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Psychiatrists plan to overhaul the mental health bibleand change how we define disorder'

The DSM will shift toward biomarker-based, more scientific diagnostic criteria and may rename the manual to emphasize "scientific" over "statistical".
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Better Way to Respond to Mental Health Crises

Most mental health crises do not justify deadly force; specialized mental-health crisis teams reduce violence and produce safer, better outcomes.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Building a House: Treating Psychosis With Anti-Psychotics

Antipsychotics can provide early emotional stability and improved reality testing, serving as a temporary foundation while psychotherapy and life-rebuilding continue.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Psychiatric drugs aren't always the answer | Letter

Yes, there has been a shocking lack of progress in developing transformative psychiatric medicine (We need new drugs for mental ill-health, 5 February), but this may be because in mental health, drugs are not always the answer (see, for example, Richard P Bentall's Doctoring the Mind). Huge progress has been made in the effectiveness of talking therapies for example, free effective treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is available to all UK army veterans through the charity PTSD Resolution.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Psychology's Misdiagnosis Problem

AI can substantially reduce diagnostic errors in psychology by synthesizing complex, multi-source information that humans struggle to weigh accurately.
#ptsd
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

We need new drugs for mental ill-health | Letter

Governments should prioritise research and approval of innovative psychiatric treatments (MDMA-assisted therapy, esketamine, cannabidiol) to relieve widespread, long-term mental suffering.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

To Medicate or Not To Medicate Your Child or Teenager

Every day, many thousands of parents across the U.S. face the difficult question of whether to place their child or teenager on a psychotropic medication. Receiving a diagnosis of a mental disorder can be scary and confusing, for the youth as well as their parents/caretakers. What is ADHD? Depression? Anxiety? OCD? Bipolar? What are the available treatments? Do we have to use medications to treat the symptoms?
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Very Different Psychiatric Diagnoses Share Common Genes

Alcohol, cannabis, opioid, and nicotine use disorders share substantial genetic liability and cluster together as a single brain disorder, supporting a unified addiction-liability.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Living Well With Psychosis: Is It Possible?

Recovery-oriented cognitive therapy combines CBT principles with recovery-focused goals to help people with psychosis regain hope, pursue meaningful life goals, and improve functioning.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Depression Clinicians Don't Talk About

They arrive on time, think clearly, and care about their clients. Outwardly, everything seems fine. In private, though, things can feel very different. A clinician's depression may not show up as clear despair. More often, it feels like emotional numbness, quietly withdrawing, or slowly losing interest in things that once mattered. Pleasure fades, curiosity lessens, and the work goes on, but it feels heavier and less alive.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Biological Beliefs Influence Medication Use

Many antidepressant users endorse biological causes for depression, which associates with prognostic pessimism, longer treatment duration, and reduced attempts to discontinue medication.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

America's Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Care Crisis

OCD is underdiagnosed and often mistreated; ERP is recommended but can fail when OCD serves protective, communicative, or attachment-related functions requiring alternative approaches.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Emotional Aftermath of an Adult ADHD Diagnosis

Adult ADHD diagnoses commonly bring initial relief followed by grief, affecting family dynamics and parenting; parental self-understanding supports better emotional regulation.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Harm to Clients When Mental Health "Cures" are Promised

Unverified promises of psychological cures can create false hope and harm; treatment claims must be evidence-based, ethical, and framed with realistic expectations.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Why UAP Disclosure Challenges Mental Health Ethics

If you saw something in the sky that you genuinely could not explain-something now officially categorized as an unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAP-would you tell your therapist or psychiatrist? For many people, the honest answer is no. Not because they doubt their own perception, but because they worry about what might happen next. They fear being seen as unstable, having the experience reframed as a symptom, or having it documented in a way that could affect future care, employment, or credibility.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Open Questions About Electroconvulsive Therapy Reveal Fuller Picture

Nearly all ECT recipients reported negative effects—chiefly memory loss—while about half reported benefits such as improved mood and reduced suicidality.
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