I would hope so - pretty awful. They didn't even do a full assessment on me - other than rule out I didn't hear voices, or had episodes of bi-ploar. As I said, any young woman aged 25 or under, presenting in crisis who had a history of abuse and who cut herself, was instantly BPD. And treated accordingly (ignored for fear of 'encouraging manipulative, attention seeking behavior' ;( ). They knew I had witnessed the sudden death of my mother (which, contrary to the movies where they show a heart attack as being 'clutch your heart and fall over', a heart attack is a pretty violent way to die -and took several minutes), yet never considered trauma as a basis of my issues? Very strange.
I had a full assessment done. Was diagnosed as having bipolar and social anxiety definitely and they thought I may have PTSD from the birth trauma but wanted to explore it more before making the diagnosis concrete. Unfortunately a few months later the narcissistic pig abuser who was second in charge of the whole service is one of those who believes "All young women who even think of self harm have BPD" and who abuses young patients swept in and ruined my life. I've found other victims of his, but couldn't encourage any to speak up. My first husband tried, but he was then abused too.
Everyone I saw after that knew my problems had started following the traumatic birth of my daughter where she and I both nearly died. They knew I wasn't sleeping due to hypervigilance of having to check she was breathing every few minutes because I was so scared of her dying. Not able to let anyone look after her (with the exception of my grandmother) for fear of her dying etc. I was the very definition of PTSD. But being a young woman with thoughts of self harm (and a history of self harm for several months four years prior during my previous severe episode of depression) and my admission that I was physically abused as a child by my bipolar mother and bullied at school, even though my episodes had very clear, discrete timeframes, my diagnosis was changed from bipolar to BPD.
What hurts me is they drew up a management plan, refused to allow my treating psychiatrist of years to have any input, refused to allow me or my family any input, refused to allow my GP who I'd been seeing for a decade when I first started seeing the health service, refused to allow anyone else involved in my care any input at all into it. Like you, it actually says to refuse me treatment for fear of encouraging manipulative behaviour. The most hurtful thing? It says if I attempted to kill myself, that I was to be punished [not their word, they used "treated"] by being discharged immediately I was medically cleared and to be denied any psychiatric follow up and that if I called I was to be hung up on, and if I presented, security were to escort me away and it actually says "to ensure she seeks appropriate help before such behaviour".... and defines appropriate help as calling the crisis team or presenting at hospital for a 24 hour admission. They were well aware that I would not go to a hospital for a 24 hour admission because I would feel just as suicidal 24 hours later and that being sent home after seeing other people with depression being treated me and me even more depressed suicidal being discharged would be the final straw to make me attempt suicide, and that EVERY SINGLE TIME that I self harmed or attempted suicide I DID call and ask for help first and was told I was just attention seeking and literally hung up on every single time (after being told I was wasting their time and they had "real mentally ill people to deal with"). So to punish me for attempting suicide claiming it would somehow "make" me call or present to hospital first when every single time I HAD called or gone to hospital first just showed their management plan was not real.
How would punishing me by cutting me off from support after a suicide attempt make me feel safe to seek help before one anyway? and the fact was I did seek help every time before one and was denied help so how would punishing me after remotely make me want to ask for help before when I knew I was going to be denied it?? I did it anyway, begged for help every time before because I just kept thinking maybe if I did every single little thing they asked, right down to every exact detail, maybe the abuse would stop. But it never did. I did everything they asked and more, but the abuse never stopped - right up until I just realised I would never ever get help and that I had to hide the self harm and pretend I was ok to protect my daughter. And within about 6 months of walking away from them and hiding the self harm, once the ongoing trauma stopped and I had some space to heal, the feeling of wanting to self harm and the depression lifted - I should also say my private psych was doing therapy with me too and she'd started me on a combination of high doses of three different psych meds, so the combination of high doses of three meds, therapy and getting away from the abuse meant I was able to heal.
But I've met so many people like myself - bipolar, tipped over the edge by a single incident PTSD, misdiagnosed as BPD, abused for it, and then driven to the point where they want to die. Three years ago it cost the life of a dear friend of mine. She'd been diagnosed for 20 years with bipolar. Then some idiot decided to label her as BPD, she got abused by the same health service I did, and she was "better" at attempting suicide than I was and after a few months of suicide attempts, she died.
Anyway november star, I actually did have a full assessment, it was known I had episodes of bipolar (huge episode of depression in 1997, long manic episode in 1999, a few other small but still "major" episodes of depression and hypomanic episodes as well), and I actually also had begun hearing voices by 2003 due to the ongoing trauma and untreated depression, but my major depressive episode was repeatedly just dismissed as "dysthymia" and false claims that it would pass in a few hours or a day or two at most (not true at all) because my ridiculous management plan said that if I had a major depressive episode that I would be hospitalised and not denied treatment, but unless it was MDE I could only have short (24 hours four times a month - originally 24 hours and then kicked out, up to four times a month, but then changed to those 4 x24 hours could be in a row) admissions if I told them I was suicidal but the reality is, MDE do not go away after even 4 days. I would go into hospital depressed, I would be booted out after a few days just as depressed, and being booted out and being told "now you can't have any contact with our service for another 26 days" made me even more depressed and suicidal. By claiming my major depressive episode was "only dysthymia" and the "transient mood of BPD", the justified their abuse of me, by denying me treatment for the MDE. I didn't even know my management plan said they had to treat me if I had MDE (there was a second page they hid from me which was only accidently released to me in my file despite having written on it "never allow client access to this page") otherwise I would have got my GP and private psychiatrist to drill into them I was having a severe MDE and to stop denying me treatment (they were unaware of the hidden page of my management plan too).
That's the danger of being misdiagnosed with BPD. If you have severe depression, they act like it's minor and transient and will pass in a few hours (or 1-2 days max) and therefore deny you access to inpatient treatment, outpatient medications, outpatient therapy and more. And denying someone having a severe depressive episode access to hospital, medication and therapy is a recipe for death. As I mentioned, it cost the life of a dear friend and it nearly cost me mine.
It's why my passion is misdiagnoses - because I've seen what happens to those who are misdiagnosed in Queensland. It's messed up. I'm glad I don't live there anymore. But all my loved ones do and it's why as well as my career here where I live now, I lobby for changes to the system in Qld so no one else goes through what I and others I care about have been through.