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is the physic ward really that bad?
Thread starterporkyminch98x
Start date
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So, for a long while now, from people I've seen on Reddit and others close to me, I keep hearing that a psychiatric ward (at least in the US) takes away a lot of your rights and treats you as if you are a prisoner. Can anyone actually confirm this, or is this an uncommon thing?
It is really hard to go through and it may feel dehumanizing. That doesn't mean you shouldn't go.
I've been to around 10 inpatients throughout my life and I've had good and bad experiences. Like when I was 12 in one place we couldn't even have books in our room. In another place at the same age (this is embarrassing) when they took my pee the nurse saw how unhealthy it looked and made sure I was drinking water for the whole day, many just overlooked it. And that same nurse also was sweet and helpful when I was on 1on1 and had to shower and felt humiliated, it may seem small but those little acts of kindness in your lowest moments are nice.
When I was 19 at the sane nice place as when I was 12 I was being truly a bitch. Even then they treated me with kindness and only sedated me once when I couldn't calm down and was getting truly out of control. But I was at another place where I saw them sedate people for minor yelling and putting down a woman who couldn't shower.
Body checks can be humiliating too.
If you are going by choice look at reviews of places because it can tell you how they operate. It can be an iffy thing but you never know what can happen unless you research and go yourself.
Reactions:
somethingisntreal, Fresh Soju, teapartyparticipant and 3 others
So, for a long while now, from people I've seen on Reddit and others close to me, I keep hearing that a psychiatric ward (at least in the US) takes away a lot of your rights and treats you as if you are a prisoner. Can anyone actually confirm this, or is this an uncommon thing?
The start of it can be rough, but once you develop a rapport with staff and other "guests," it tends to get better. The waiting in the ER is the worst part. At the actual facility where you get treatment, there are often activities, you can go outside, etc.
You can send me a PM if you want. The last time I was in the psych ward was one of the happiest times of my life.
Reactions:
Fresh Soju, teapartyparticipant and Star67
I went when I was 25 and it was a great experience for me personally though I was a voluntary patient. I'm sure it's different if you're involuntary, I saw a patient there try to escape as he was formed. I made some friends on the ward and the food was fine. The main downside was that this was during Covid so we couldn't leave the ward. My life went back to shit after I left because I didn't practice anything I'd learned.
Depends on your personality type and the type of institution it is, and the goals you have for your future. Emphasis on the last one.
You likely will be blacklisted from the military (not that I support, especially the US one,) a lot of healthcare and government jobs, teaching, etc.
Figure out what you want to do and if it's worth risking. Sometimes it's absolutely necessary and you need to accept that you aren't mentally apt for the above mentioned jobs.
I actually thought the psych ward was kind of nice. The problem is that I was there for less than a week and ended up getting billed about $16,000 USD. My financial situation has gotten even worse since then, so there's no way I can do that again.
Reactions:
fadedghost, Fresh Soju, LittleJem and 1 other person
It feeds you, and Im not well enough to look after myself.
It gives you some level of social life. Not much fresh air. The meds dont work for me, but you do get benzos on tap in the uk. Till tbey disvharge you.Then no benzos.
It is really hard to go through and it may feel dehumanizing. That doesn't mean you shouldn't go.
I've been to around 10 inpatients throughout my life and I've had good and bad experiences. Like when I was 12 in one place we couldn't even have books in our room. In another place at the same age (this is embarrassing) when they took my pee the nurse saw how unhealthy it looked and made sure I was drinking water for the whole day, many just overlooked it. And that same nurse also was sweet and helpful when I was on 1on1 and had to shower and felt humiliated, it may seem small but those little acts of kindness in your lowest moments are nice.
When I was 19 at the sane nice place as when I was 12 I was being truly a bitch. Even then they treated me with kindness and only sedated me once when I couldn't calm down and was getting truly out of control. But I was at another place where I saw them sedate people for minor yelling and putting down a woman who couldn't shower.
Body checks can be humiliating too.
If you are going by choice look at reviews of places because it can tell you how they operate. It can be an iffy thing but you never know what can happen unless you research and go yourself.
So, for a long while now, from people I've seen on Reddit and others close to me, I keep hearing that a psychiatric ward (at least in the US) takes away a lot of your rights and treats you as if you are a prisoner. Can anyone actually confirm this, or is this an uncommon thing?
yes it is that awful, the rumors may even understate how bad it is. mental health care pretends to be nice when you're choosing to pay them, but when you're on the hook for the bill and don't have a choice to leave they treat you like subgarbage.
I actually thought the psych ward was kind of nice. The problem is that I was there for less than a week and ended up getting billed about $16,000 USD. My financial situation has gotten even worse since then, so there's no way I can do that again.
Mental professionals NEVER care about financial realities. It's all about extracting money from people, real world impacts be damned. I'm so sorry you were fucked over by this evil and exploitative industry.
Definitely messed me up a bit. I have memories that I think about still (two in the ER though when it was involuntary and those were the worst). But it helped me in ways too but the biggest part was safety and medication, they can monitor you better than an outpatient psych so you can get to a stable level quicker.
But I would have never grown up okay, I have bipolar 1 with it being very obviously genetic lol. And I think even if I never did experience anything from inpatient or even have bipolar I wouldn't be okay because my issues started before than like I think most peoples do.
when i went to the psych ward (5150'd) it was horrible and i was terrified. i was also like, 15 years old? i just wanted to go home. it irreversibly changed my entire life. i would be someone/somewhere completely different had i not gone. in retrospect though i kind of miss it. sometimes i want to go back.
yep. there's so much degradation by default in there, and the pain and psychological suffering people endure is NEVER factored into the equation. It's their rules, they know everything, and who cares if you're kept in a room for 48 hours that's cold with nothing to even read or watch or anything.
Being in that place made me realize how much everyone is in indifferent to my suffering and absolutely no one cares about me. That's what I got from my locked "care" experience.
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