Dr. Kerr's Review
First Aid to Mental Illness: A
Practical Guide for Patients and Caregivers, by Michael G.
Rayel, MD, Soar Dime, Clarenville, NF (Canada),
2002.
This relatively brief manual addresses
an important gap in the provision of primary care
services—What to do with patients suspected as having mental
illness before formal consultation and assessment are
available or requested? I was recently surprised
to learn from an article in the British Medical Journal
that there is, on average, a 2-year delay in the formal
diagnosis of schizophrenia. This means that many patients
and families or caregivers are going for prolonged periods
of time without much or any formal assistance and/or
education about the processes affecting the family member.
It is equally clear that with many other major mental health
diagnoses (depression, anxiety, dementia, substance abuse,
etc.) there are even longer periods of trying to cope with
the mental health problem without formal evaluation and
treatment.
Michael Rayel’s lucid book seeks to
empower caregivers and patients to manage this early
morbidity of mental health problems more successfully. He
presents information to enable lay persons to identify the
emotional difficulty and to give them a basic approach for
dealing with the predictable risks and crises associated
with mental illness. He outlines his basic approach to
mental health problems for patients with the mnemonic
CARE:
Check for signs of mental illness; Anticipate
complications;
Remedy with early intervetion, and Educate
yourself about the illness. Typical ‘red flags’ to look for
among the early signs of mental illness include symptoms
like: self-talk with such statements as ‘something is not
right,’ ‘I don’t feel the same,’ ‘I feel funny,’ ‘I have to
push myself’; changes in usual daily routine and
activities;
disturbances in energy, sleep, and appetite; and emotional
symptoms such as crying for no reason or unusual
suspiciousness. He then offers a simple, practical approach
for caregivers represented in another mnemonic—HEAL: Help
yourself throught aBCs of first aid; Encourage
yourself;
Address the issues; and Learn to cope. The
ABCs refer to:
Accepting the ongoing mental health problem—it’s not
anyone’s fault, it just is; Be alert for signs of
destructve thoughts and behavior; Check for worsening
of symptoms;
and, finally, Call for help.
The book dedicates a brief chapter to
each of the major common mental health problems—depression,
mania, panic, phobia,obsessions and compultsions,
post-traumatic diosrders, anixiety, psychoics, substance
abuse, earting disorders, dementia, and grief and
bereavement. Each starts with a short clinical case
desription, offers a brief general overview, including the
formal DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for each
disorder; this
is followed by a concise presentation of the CARE and HEAL
steps for the specific disorder. The clinical descriptions
are taken from real patients and effectively represent
typical features of the illness. Some of the specific
details serve to remind clinicians of the potential medical
effects of mental illness in a striking way—for example, the
obsessive-compulsive whose ritual hand-washing progresses to
5 hours of showering per day; among the consequences of
this are that the hot water runs out, and the patient on one
occasion had to be admitted to the hospital for
hypothermia.
The repetitive format makes the book more effective as a
reference manual rather than a simple read for information.
I believe the material presented for caregivers has real
value and is a significant enhancement to the primary care
of mental illness. As a primary care physician, I am
principally interested in it for the purpose of distributing
the appropriate chapter(s) to caregivers to enhance their
understanding of the illness and their readiness to cope and
intervene effectively when necessary. Our current
disorganized mental health system depends critically upon
the capacity of these caregivers to render effective
assistance to these disabled patients, but until now no one
has given much thought about how best to prepare and assist
the caregivers. Despite its title, this book has far less
value for patients since their capacity for organization and
discipline required to implement the self-care steps is so
impaired during mental illness, but for high-functioning
individuals with depression or anxiety, the self-care steps
suggested are practical and appropriate. Dr. Rayel
appropriately gives a lot of attention to sound self-care
principles as practicing relaxation, exercise, eating right,
practicing good sleep hygiene, and how to deal with anger
and negative self-thoughts.
Since primary care physicians are the
front line of the health care system in dealing with mental
health problems, this book represents an important and
efficient new reference tool. The material in this book will
enable primary care physicians to provide concise,
accessible information in an appropriate combination of lay
and clinical language to make them more knowledgeable and
effective in caring for their loved ones with mental health
illnesses. I would specifically recommend making copies of
the specific chapters relevant to their family member
available and to use it in a continuing process to make them
more competent in understanding, protecting, and caring for
their loved ones. What I would like to see next from this
author is a short book directed specifically at primary care
physicians to enhance their ability to provide adequately
for the needs of these families in the scope of a typical 15
minute office visit.
Colin P Kopes-Kerr, MD, JD,
MPH
Program Director
Stony Brook Family Practice
Residency
University Hospital
Stony Brook NY 11794
(631-444-8284)
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