Is there a doctor in the house?
Does anyone know of a psychiatrist, anywhere in northern New Jersey,
who accepts Blue Cross and who can diagnose an adult on the spectrum?
I've been looking for almost five years and have found nothing.
It's a $50 co-pay every time I try.
No, I don't want drugs and no, I don't need someone to teach me how to tie my shoes.
It's like – I go in complaining about my appendix and they say,
"I don't know anything about that, so let's talk about your tonsils."
The place I went today assured me on the phone that their doctor could do it.
When I got there, she said that she read a book about it once and found it fascinating…
Here's a link. Maybe you can start from here.
http://psychiatrists.psychologytoday.co ... 51&lmore=1
_________________
One Day At A Time.
His first book: http://www.amazon.com/Wetland-Other-Sto ... B00E0NVTL2
His second book: https://www.amazon.com/COMMONER-VAGABON ... oks&sr=1-2
His blog: http://seattlewordsmith.wordpress.com/
Tahitiii you are not really going to have much luck with that from my experience. I just started working with a therapist over at Central Jersey Behavioral Health over in Cranford. The psychiatrist I started with wasn't much help, but at least with the therapist I at least get work work out my frustrations, coping skills, and on anger management. CJBH has some decent reviews, and I too have BC/BS which they accept ($40 co-pay for me). Along with ASD I have been diagnosed with double-dip depression, and PTSD (10 years working FD/EMS in a city in your neck of the woods will do that).
http://psychiatrists.psychologytoday.co ... 51&lmore=1
Sometimes your best bet is to find someone who is willing to learn and listen. The best people to do this are often younger and newer to the profession because they haven't been out of school for so long that they've developed patient stereotypes and are still used to having to learn new things constantly (an academically curious older professional would be even better, but I wouldn't know how to tell which ones qualified). If your case is unusual--adults presenting for the first time with autistic traits aren't really the typical case of autism--the person who is best able to help you is someone who can be flexible--whether that flexibility means learning new things about adult autism, or whether it means acknowledging that you don't really fit into any particular box and dealing with your particular issues specifically rather than trying to fit you into a pattern where you don't really belong.
_________________
Reports from a Resident Alien:
http://chaoticidealism.livejournal.com
Autism Memorial:
http://autism-memorial.livejournal.com
I don't need anger management, drugs or any of that stuff.
I just need an evaluation.
Initially all I got was Depression, and PTSD from the shrink. Once I started with the therapist, and shown him the results of my RADDS-R which he now feels is the underlying cause of my other issues. Guess mental health professional's aren't used to seeing older adults coming in for Aspergers.
Similar Topics | |
---|---|
Doctor Who |
24 Mar 2024, 10:05 am |
An Apple a Day Keeps the Doctor Away |
15 Mar 2024, 4:04 pm |
House Intelligence Chairman - National Security threat |
14 Feb 2024, 4:18 pm |
White House Wants a Standard Moon Time for New Space Race |
04 Apr 2024, 7:39 pm |