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- Oct 15, 2017
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Seems like every patient I see has generalized anxiety disorder listed in their chart.
Maybe 1/10 or less actually has it. If you actually bother to draw the meaningful distinctions within everything described as "anxiety", turns out most of these people have one or more of PTSD, OCD, social anxiety disorder, Mdd w/anxious distress, bipolar disorder, hell even legit adhd, sometimes acute appropriate situational anxiety (ie...while waiting for a biopsy result...) literally anything else but no goddam GAD.
I do believe GAD is a real diagnosis, I have had patients who legitimately fit the criteria and did not have comorbidities. They tend to do really well with standard dose SSRIs and straightforward CBT. It's not a label that should be slapped willy nilly on every anxious patient.
This abject diagnostic laziness does a major disservice to the patients and to perceptions of mental health care.
This rant brought to you by the novella of a note I just finished on a patient with both ocd (for decades) and ptsd (for years, dating from a very specific and clearly criterion A event) whose psychiatric problem list contained only....GAD. Sigh.
Maybe 1/10 or less actually has it. If you actually bother to draw the meaningful distinctions within everything described as "anxiety", turns out most of these people have one or more of PTSD, OCD, social anxiety disorder, Mdd w/anxious distress, bipolar disorder, hell even legit adhd, sometimes acute appropriate situational anxiety (ie...while waiting for a biopsy result...) literally anything else but no goddam GAD.
I do believe GAD is a real diagnosis, I have had patients who legitimately fit the criteria and did not have comorbidities. They tend to do really well with standard dose SSRIs and straightforward CBT. It's not a label that should be slapped willy nilly on every anxious patient.
This abject diagnostic laziness does a major disservice to the patients and to perceptions of mental health care.
This rant brought to you by the novella of a note I just finished on a patient with both ocd (for decades) and ptsd (for years, dating from a very specific and clearly criterion A event) whose psychiatric problem list contained only....GAD. Sigh.