Volatile
God
- Jun 18, 2018
- 1,286
Depends where you go. I was doxxed a late last year and sent to a psych ward for a little over a week.
Typically, we have group therapy in the morning. No shoelaces, belts, or anything that you could use for self-harm. Terrible good. Coffee isn't even caffeinated. Crazy people. Crazy expensive too.
How did you get doxxed? What if a person can't afford hospitalization?
I understand, so then how does one avoid getting doxxed?How I got doxxed is a long story that I will not share here.
Well, if you are a deemed a threat to yourself and you report it. You're getting warded. And they'll bill you after. Typically a night in a psych ward equals out to about $1,500 a night.
I understand, so then how does one avoid getting doxxed?
It seems like the bill would just reignite any suicidal feelings.
Going to the psych ward is pretty bad. The food was bland, I was scared of a few other patients, and I had little to no privacy. Best thing to do is there is sleep.
We had different types of therapy to do, we talked to a psychiatrist every once in awhile, we had a daily regimen of pills to take and we watched a bunch of TV.
Sounds like prison. Do you get your own room?
I had my own room but I believe it's extremely more common to share a room with others.Sounds like prison. Do you get your own room?
Yep. They just gaslight you and mindfuck you til you start reciting their script.It's boring, I was in there for two weeks. I told them what they wanted to hear so I could leave. The food sucked. Horrible coffee and the staff was irritating. I couldn't sleep because they would open the door every 15 minutes. My bed was close to the door so the bright light from the hallway would hit me. The people were weird. Someone pissed on the floor my second day there. My roommate slept almost the entire time I was there. They had children's books. Like why we are adults. People were fighting over cigarettes and candy. They played star wars for three days straight.
How did you get doxxed? What if a person can't afford hospitalization?
TBH, I'm always suspicious of people on here who claim to have been on a medical ward. I suspect most people on here are like me and haven't attempted suicide, either because of SI, fears of becoming a vegetable, or both.
Anyway, the only thing psych wards succeed at is making people more suicidal than they already were.
TBH, I'm always suspicious of people on here who claim to have been on a medical ward. I suspect most people on here are like me and haven't attempted suicide, either because of SI, fears of becoming a vegetable, or both.
Anyway, the only thing psych wards succeed at is making people more suicidal than they already were.
Yea if you cannot pay expect some bills in the multiple thousands in hospital charges for an inpatient stay.I've only been able to find Florida and New Jersey's policies on this. In Florida and NJ, a patient is only required to pay if they have the ability to pay- at least in theory.
However, they might claim that everybody has the ability to pay. And it's not like anybody who's too indigent to pay will be able to afford a lawyer to challenge the payment.
I'm not trying to be provocative at all - but most suicides fail... it's kind of more likely that people have failed and end up here than succeeded and not?
Most suicide "attempts" (if they can even be called that) are drug overdoses. That's why the success rate for suicide is so low.
Anyway, I'm skeptical of how many people on here have made real suicide attempts like jumping or at least hanging.
I guess some people on here might have been thrown into a psych ward after a failed overdose, but most overdoses aren't bad enough that you'd need to go to a hospital. Plus you can claim to the doctor that the overdose was accidental.
In terms of assessing someone for an admission, the objective lethality of a suicide method isn't really relevant. It's more about intent. If a person believes what they are going to do/have done will kill them, that's a suicide attempt regardless of how it pans out. At least, that's what you're taught as a psych nurse.