hibiscuswahine
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Yes there is an insidious creep that I have seen since I have retired. I see this as due to financial pressures within the system. Not a reasonable reason but governments and their policies are squeezing the health dollar more and more. It is so easy to dump their patients into the "psych" basket, or the "we can't help basket" and not willing to investigate further or upskill themselves. I find it amazing, in a bad way, that suddenly they are all experts in diagnosing psychiatric disorders. Often they are in for a surprise when psychiatry refuses to see them (and often point out their lack of medical work up). It's expedient for them, bordering on criminal (medicolegal) neglect for the patients.
Please share @bobbler your recent reading in a new post, if possible, that sounds interesting, I am presuming this is for the UK. I would like to say in NZ, liaison psychiatry or any specialty within psychiatry don't have enough time to "hawk through the wards or catch them in A&E". There is not enough CL psychiatrists or general psychiatrists/registrars to do such a thing. We don't have enough psychiatrists to see anything but moderate to high risk psychiatric disorders. It is also ethically unsound.
Please share @bobbler your recent reading in a new post, if possible, that sounds interesting, I am presuming this is for the UK. I would like to say in NZ, liaison psychiatry or any specialty within psychiatry don't have enough time to "hawk through the wards or catch them in A&E". There is not enough CL psychiatrists or general psychiatrists/registrars to do such a thing. We don't have enough psychiatrists to see anything but moderate to high risk psychiatric disorders. It is also ethically unsound.