Mental Health Consult

Psychosis: First-episode variety in adolescence ‘insidious’


 

Serious mental illness can present slowly and in ways that might not look serious, which is why primary care physicians would do well to educate themselves about what psychosis looks like.

The problem, according to Dr. David Pickar, psychiatrist and former (retired) intramural research director for the National Institute of Mental Health, is the lack of information about recognizing the signs and symptoms, and about proper interventions.

“Knowing about it is enormously important for all docs,” Dr. Pickar says. “What’s fascinating is many of the first breaks occur, not necessarily quietly, but can be a little insidious. They can be brought to primary care. It is not uncommon. With serious mental illness, particularly schizophrenia, 1% of the population has it. That makes it a very common disorder.”

Recommended Reading

Early treatment key in first-episode psychosis
MDedge Family Medicine
APA-IPS: Smartphone app found feasible for managing schizophrenia
MDedge Family Medicine
Patient-centered early intervention superior in first-episode psychosis
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Integrated care is key to ‘normal’ life with schizophrenia
MDedge Family Medicine
Medicaid scripts reveal rise in risky polypharmacy in children
MDedge Family Medicine
Burden of psychiatric comorbidity higher in MS patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Researchers highlight gaps in diabetes screening in patients on antipsychotics
MDedge Family Medicine
Stimulant use may raise psychosis risk for children of those with mental illness
MDedge Family Medicine
Antipsychotics may double to triple diabetes risk in youth
MDedge Family Medicine
Calibration of schizophrenia treatment is a delicate balancing act
MDedge Family Medicine