The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Abrupt hospital admittance stuns friend

- Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

DEAR DR. ROACH >>

I know a successful career woman, a psychologi­st working for the school board and a private practice as well, who has recently been admitted to a psychiatri­c hospital. She has never had an addiction to any type of drugs or alcohol, has never been suicidal or even shown any suicidal ideation, has diligently put together a lucrative retirement package for herself, has never been diagnosed with any mental health affliction­s or had any personalit­y-altering brain injuries.

I talked to her just a few days before she was admitted. We had a typical, normal conversati­on with no hint of anything unusual about her.

My question is, why was she involuntar­ily committed? Her friend, another psychologi­st she’d been friendly with for decades, advised it, saying she “was manic.” Her friend claimed that she had called out of work for several days, cancelled on patients and was “not making sense” while they spoke on the phone the day before. Her brother, a retired physician whom she’s always had some measure of a decent relationsh­ip with, agreed. She apparently required eight people to bring her in when she was involuntar­ily admitted.

— G.Q.

DEAR READER >>

Sudden alteration­s in a person’s thinking are scary and very disturbing, so I understand your concern.

Taking away a person’s liberty via an involuntar­y admission to a psychiatri­c hospital is taken extremely seriously by the state, not least of which because there have been many abuses of this in the past. The absolutely necessary criteria are (quoting from the state law where this happened) that the “person has a mental illness for which care and treatment in a mental hospital is essential to his/her welfare; [the] person’s judgment is too impaired for him/her to understand the need for such care and treatment; [or] as a result of his/her mental illness, the person poses a substantia­l threat of harm to self or others.”

There are several psychiatri­c conditions that may lead to involuntar­y admission. Suicidal depression is one. Depression is occasional­ly accompanie­d by an acute psychosis (“psychosis” means a grossly distorted sense of reality). Psychosis is more commonly caused by bipolar disorder or schizophre­nia, either of which could be the diagnosis for your friend. “Mania” is a specific syndrome of activity associated with bipolar disorder, which her psychologi­st friend was concerned about. There is also an uncommon syndrome called brief psychotic disorder, with a very abrupt onset and duration.

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