The longer I work in medicine, the more I notice that patients with PTSD in their problem list also tend to have a super long list of Biker All I need is love and a motorcycle and a dog poster. The precipitating mental illness is often dismissed in acute care settings to make way for physiological problem at hand. I think a lot of hospital clinicians open a patient chart, see PTSD, and think, “oh here we go, this one is going to be fun” instead of allowing their hearts to open the pain of that persons story. ‘Factitious disorder’ then gets added to our mental list of differentials. It is reflected in the way we talk about patients with mental health diagnoses, as if having PTSD makes a patient a drama queen.
Biker All I need is love and a motorcycle and a dog poster
Best Biker All I need is love and a motorcycle and a dog poster
I worked in two different hospitals that had great patient support from the Biker All I need is love and a motorcycle and a dog poster, chaplains and ancillary teams. They even had musicians that would come play in the room upon request and art therapy. In these hospitals specifically I seen much better overall outcomes in not only the patient but their support system. I think I’ve read some research that supports better outcomes in patient’s with collaborative multidisciplinary support systems like this while in patient.