- Admin
- #13
anthony
Founder
JD, grieving is different to PTSD... the daily symptoms also differ. Whilst you may have been diagnosed with PTSD because you met a minimum symptom level, and have symptoms that exceed that of an adjustment disorder, which are for grieving death of a loved one... they are vastly different in nature.
Did a psychiatrist diagnose you with PTSD? If not... I would seek a psychiatrists diagnosis... as psychologists and such are not experts or experienced in accurately diagnosing mental illness, compared to a psychiatrist. Not even close actually. Psychologists though are the better choice for therapy, as that is their specialty. Whilst they can diagnose, they have a high prevalence of getting it wrong due to their limited understanding and no real training in diagnostic medicine. Psychiatrists are doctors first... about 12 years to be a psychiatrist, 3 years to be a psychologist. Vast experience and training different for diagnosis.
Not disregarding your trauma, far from it... but you mention grief a lot, which makes me wonder more about the solution for what you need to be treated. Treating PTSD and treating grief are very different therapy models. Trying to treat grief with PTSD modalities will likely only continue to prolong the grieving process, as an example.
Did a psychiatrist diagnose you with PTSD? If not... I would seek a psychiatrists diagnosis... as psychologists and such are not experts or experienced in accurately diagnosing mental illness, compared to a psychiatrist. Not even close actually. Psychologists though are the better choice for therapy, as that is their specialty. Whilst they can diagnose, they have a high prevalence of getting it wrong due to their limited understanding and no real training in diagnostic medicine. Psychiatrists are doctors first... about 12 years to be a psychiatrist, 3 years to be a psychologist. Vast experience and training different for diagnosis.
Not disregarding your trauma, far from it... but you mention grief a lot, which makes me wonder more about the solution for what you need to be treated. Treating PTSD and treating grief are very different therapy models. Trying to treat grief with PTSD modalities will likely only continue to prolong the grieving process, as an example.