Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The antipsychotics don’t resolve all issues, never mind the side effects, at least for most patients.
I don’t really think a psychiatrist with a 15-minute visit is able to determine whether or not your kid can go back. You should check that the academic skills are in place, and that they’re not having ADHD problems or lower energy.
What if the psychiatrist is seeing the patient on a regular basis?
For me as a parent, if the student wants to return and the psychiatrist & therapist support it and have helped student develop a specific plan, then I, as the parent, am going to support it, even if I privately fear failure.
It isn't my job to protect my mentally ill child from failure. It is my job to say it's OK to try and fail and to pick up and try again.
I heard a NAMI peer presentation from someone who had to drop out 2-3 times from undergrad due to bipolar but ended up graduating from that global top university. I'm sure in the middle of it all plenty of people doubted whether she was right to continue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The antipsychotics don’t resolve all issues, never mind the side effects, at least for most patients.
I don’t really think a psychiatrist with a 15-minute visit is able to determine whether or not your kid can go back. You should check that the academic skills are in place, and that they’re not having ADHD problems or lower energy.
What if the psychiatrist is seeing the patient on a regular basis?
Anonymous wrote:I would consider whether the kid has a strong support network of friends at school to return to. If not, I would send them someplace closer to home where I could keep a close eye on them.
If the kid is wanting to get back to their community, that is understandable, and I would do everything I could to support that. But if the impetus to get the kid back to college is the parent/student feeling pressure to get "back on track" I would rethink that. Better to go slowly and be successful than risk another crisis where there are limited supports.
Anonymous wrote:I think return to school can be helpful, but, I'd want to be sure supports were in place - a disability accommodations plan, medication if appropriate, local psychiatrist and therapist, a signed healthcare power for anyone over 18 and signed permission to get info from the school about classes, grades, etc. I would also look at college tuition reimbursement policies and see how mental illness is covered.
You can also think about part time v full time and what kind of living situation would be best.
Many colleges do have policies on mental health care return - very discriminatory, unfair ones that force kids to "reapply" to school and as such create even more stress. There've been stories on Yale and other Ivies (Columbia is not great about this.)
A lot of this you will have to negotiate with your child. It needs to be supportive - not worried, controlling parent.
Anonymous wrote:The antipsychotics don’t resolve all issues, never mind the side effects, at least for most patients.
I don’t really think a psychiatrist with a 15-minute visit is able to determine whether or not your kid can go back. You should check that the academic skills are in place, and that they’re not having ADHD problems or lower energy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the mental health issue. With bipolar and schizophrenia I’d slow way down on return to school.
Why the slow down? What if shrink says okay?
Appreciate any and all insights. TY.
I don’t think bipolar and schizophrenia medications resolve symptoms completely and without side effects. A serious episode can exhaust your mind for many weeks. Also your kid needs to keep taking them or risk relapse. SSRIs just work better overall.
Most psychiatrists aren’t so great at the SMIs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the mental health issue. With bipolar and schizophrenia I’d slow way down on return to school.
Why the slow down? What if shrink says okay?
Appreciate any and all insights. TY.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the mental health issue. With bipolar and schizophrenia I’d slow way down on return to school.