Definitetly not always.
My concern is this, a doctor will NEVER tell you it's spiritual. They
will also not deny that you have one or another of the plethora of
disorders - I think it's generic diagnosing like they give out
broad spectrum antibiotics.
I agree...and has been my experience both as an MA and a patient...docs are WAY too quick with the Rx pads. Part of that is the public's fault too though...many don't think they've got their money's worth if they don't walk out with a script.
To be fair...I did have one doc who wrote me two scripts for my depression...one for Welbutrin...and one for "church" he actually wrote "church" on a script pad...

and interestingly...when I filled the script for church...I no longer needed the script for Welbutrin...
Don't get me started on the antibiotic problems...there's antibiotics in almost everything...and sadly...bugs get stronger and more virulent and our natural immune systems get weaker and weaker...and we can't come up with new antibiotics and get them approved fast enough....aaaand, I'm gonna stop right there...."hoooold on thar baba louie"...
So they'll ALWAYS find a "medical" problem and put you on some
sort of meds whether it's spiritual or not.
So how does a person actually find out which it really is?
It would be great if docs spent more time evaluating a person's lifestyle...diet, exercise, work environment, home life and such...I mean..if you pump your kids full of sugar every day and use your tv set as a babysitter...no wonder the kids are confused and bouncin' off the walls...
Same with adults...if you eat a bunch of junk...don't exercise and fill your head with a bunch of garbage...of course you're gonna feel like crap.
We have to remember...as patients...we have a bit of responsibility in addition to the doc...like I told my new doc right from the get-go. I'm not an Rx freak...so don't feel like you always have to pull out your script pad to help me.
This is the "age of info" as well...we can research a lot of things ourselves...and I certainly wouldn't recommend any self-diagnosing...but we absolutely can walk into the docs office with some informed questions.
As I've understood, most people on medications end up staying
on medications permanently... it's not some temporary problem
when the Prozac label used to say something to the effect of
seek the source of the depression.
So the meds are no Cure... there doesn't seem to BE a cure.
Most often they tell you...the meds are not curative and meant to help a patient through the psychological recovery process. The thing is...how many of us really want to put that much effort into our lives when we can find relief in a bottle. Why sort our lives out when a Xanax makes our life bearable just the way it is?
Now...I firmly believe there are some very real clinical reasons for people to be on meds...there are many who suffer from bipolar disorder that these meds are truly life saving. And that's really the point...if the disorder is truly physical...meds will help...and if the meds don't help...how about docs and patients consider meds aren't the answer...

...and start to consider perhaps there is a whole different set of issues going on.
I think it's a horrible problem for anyone to get real help if
they have something going on.
Absolutely!