Your best bet is establishing a relationship with a good psychiatrist and therapist rather than emergency care. (I'm the PP with the ER experience.) |
| My husband went through this -- he couldn't shake the depression despite having a wonderful life -- with the right medication, he has been perfectly fine. |
| We also unfortunately went through this and it is a very serious and potentially lethal illness. We almost lost our DS at age 15, so please listen to the other wise parents on this board and find him a good adolescent psychiatrist as soon as possible for further evaluation and treatment. It will not disappear on its own and it will only get worse without professional help. Good luck to you and DS. |
Op here thanks everyone. If anyone knows a good teen psychiatrist would you share the name please? We are in bethesda. |
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http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/546352.page
3 names, one in Chevy Chase |
How is your son doing, OP? |
Why would you take away all privileges and activities? Punish him for being depressed? |
| I would definitely do some snooping on social media. Perhaps your son is being bullied, ignored or belittled by peers who you assume of classmates and friends. Also, you mention he's 13 and doesn't like girls, which seems totally fine and normal, but I just want to ask...do you think he might be gay and is coming to this realization and isn't sure how to handle it? How to tell you? How to be ok with that? |
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I am so sorry your son is going through this. I work in suicide prevention, and I encourage you to:
1. Find a new therapist that either specializes in Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) or Cognitive-behavioral therapy for suicide prevention (CBT-SP). **Most therapists are not trained in treating people with suicidal thoughts. 2. Lock up all medications (prescription and over the counter), if you have guns - get them out of the house, and lock up any other means he could use to harm himself (ropes, etc). Here is a list of resources for you: http://www.sprc.org/sites/sprc.org/files/Families.pdf |
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Besides getting into therapy, what can a parent do? How long should you wait before deciding a therapist isn't working? Any way to get insurance to cover out of network? None of them seem to be in network. How do you know when to stop going? What if they seem worse after going? Any suggestions on a non med approach?
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We've been through this twice with young teen boys and my husband went through this as well as a teen. The boys have been in therapy, as needed, and we've also done family therapy. None of the therapists have been in network, unfortunately.
What does your son's therapist say? Our experienced therapist knew that my son's life was not in danger and that we did not need to take him to the ER after he expressed that he might want to end his life to a friend. This is really tricky territory though so I was glad that we had a well-trained therapist that we trusted. All of this was a wake-up call for my often traveling DH to be more involved in our kids' lives. It is really hard to take this on alone, as a parent. FYI, We've been non-meds all the way. However, we have very large therapy bills. Our kids will always need to be aware of their mental health but for both of them, those early teen years seem to have been the low point. |
Your son needs help. If he does not respond to his therapist, and still has his issues, then you need to find other medical attention immediately. If your child had a problem with a life-threatening condition, you were seeing one specialist, but his treatment was not showing any signs of progress, what would you do? You'd probably try to find another specialist right? Same thing. Find other medical attention and do so immediately before your son decides to act on his threats to himself. If he says he feels this way EVERY DAY, he may act ANY DAY. Tomorrow may be too late if today is the day he decides to act. You need to take action immediately. The talk of suicide is a very loud, very urgent call for help. Answer it immediately. Ask your therapist for a recommendation to someone else. If you have no one else to ask, call a suicide prevention hotline and ask for a referral. Here's one if you can't find another. 1 (800) 273-8255 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Hours: 24 hours, 7 days a week Languages: English, Spanish Website: www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org |
Fair point- he likes girls just not super into like some of his friends. He could be gay, I kind of doubt it, we are very open about our support of gay rights etc and I think we'd be about as easy as it gets as a family to come out to- but who knows. |
+1000000 |