Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Your Doctor Thinks You're Crazy and You're Making it Worse

You’re sick all the time with a chronic illness but your doctor doesn’t believe you. He’s run every test, checked and rechecked your medical records, and seen you dozens of times in the office. It doesn’t seem to matter how verbal you are, how much information you bring or how much “evidence” you pile up. He’s thoroughly convinced you’re insane. The problem is, you’re making it worse.

You might be thinking I’m another skeptic writing an article about how chronic pain and illness doesn’t exist. Just the opposite. From the time I was born to the time I was 22 years old, I was sick every day of my life. I had persistent and rather disgusting digestive issues, candida overgrowth, muscle pain, mental health symptoms, and bruises that wouldn’t go away.

I went to dozens of doctors during that time-period only to be met with cynicism and the belief that I just wanted attention. Could you be reinforcing his belief that you’re not really sick but mentally unwell?

Most Medical Doctors Treat Symptoms and Prescribe Drugs

Before I go into what you might be doing to ensure your doctor is never going to believe what you say, let me start by saying this: Most medical doctors are trained from their early days of medical school to treat symptoms by prescribing drugs.

Hopeful healers start out believing that they’re getting into the medical system to help people. Within a year, they’re burnt out and crushed by a system that is more interested in keeping patients addicted to drugs than actually making them better.

That isn’t to say all medical doctors are like that but a large majority of them are. So when the drug doesn’t work and the symptoms keep coming back, the doctor isn’t sure what to do next. He’s spent years in school learning how to stop symptoms with the right combination of drugs. When the patient is still sick, it must be in her head.

That’s not fair to you. You didn’t ask for your doctor to be educated and trained in this narrow-minded way. But because he is, there are a few things you could be doing to worsen his opinion of you.

Angry, Hysterical Patients Reaffirm the Hypochondriac Diagnosis

Some doctors are so overconfident that they’re right and you’re wrong, they can get downright abusive. When you’re already living with chronic pain, it can take nothing to get you to burst into tears or yell at the doctor who is staring at you smugly from across the room. This only makes things worse.

If a doctor is already convinced your chronic illness is in your head and you start ranting, raving or sobbing, you’re only confirming his belief you have a mental health problem. You have every right to be hurt and angry. Unfortunately, if you show it in this way, he’s going to have an even harder time taking you seriously.

The best way to approach a cynical doctor is calmly and rationally. Tell him exactly what kind of symptoms you’re experiencing, where they are, and how long they’ve been going on. The next time he sends you for blood work, ask him to test for food allergies, vitamin deficiencies, and parasitic or bacterial infection. Standard blood work often misses what could be revealing information about your health.

He may think this request a bit strange but if you remain calm and tell him you just want to rule anything out that might have been missed, he’ll likely agree and send you for the extra tests. If he won’t, ask if he can refer you to someone who will. If that still doesn’t work, it might be time to find a new doctor.

Patients with Chronic Illness Ask for Too Many Drugs

Patients stuck in the “sick care system” of modern America are just as guilty of asking for drugs to treat symptoms as doctors are of prescribing them. Why? When was the last time you got through an entire evening of television watching without seeing some sort of commercial for a drug? We are hard-wired as a society to see synthetic chemicals that suppress symptoms as an effective way to treat disease.

As anyone suffering from chronic illness will tell you, eventually finding a cure isn’t always what you think about. It’s how to get through the next day or even the next minute without terrible pain. Doctors who prescribe narcotic or steroid medications for their chronic pain patients may inadvertently turn them into addicts who need more drugs to get the same effect.

See, it’s really not fair. You’re in pain. Your doctor puts you on a highly-addictive substance and you feel relief. Then, just after a short time on these drugs, he tells you he can’t continue to prescribe them. The pain comes back, more unbearable than ever, and you ask for something, anything to stop it.

Meanwhile, he’s still telling you he doesn’t really know what’s going on with you and won’t give you any tools to really heal.

Out of desperation, you may go to another doctor out of town to get more drugs. This is what’s known as ‘doctor shopping’ and it’s illegal. The trouble is, many chronic pain sufferers are unaware of this and get arrested without knowing what they’ve done wrong. That isn’t to say some don’t do it on purpose to get high but I honestly believe plenty of genuinely sick people just want relief and don’t know what else to do.

The More Doctors You See, The More You Just Want Attention

When I was at the height of my determination to figure out exactly what was wrong with me, I saw a new doctor every week. I sometimes had 5 of them on the go at once. I was willing to put myself through just about every test under the sun to find out why I was always so sick.

To me, seeing a lot of different doctors was the only way I knew how to increase my likelihood that one of them would figure out my problem. To the conventional medical community, however, this behavior could come across as an attention-seeking cry for help.

This is just a viewpoint and shouldn’t discourage you from continuing to get second, third, and even tenth opinions. It’s just important to realize what it might look like and why it’s so difficult to be taken seriously.

Looking Symptoms Up Online is a Double-Edged Sword

When your doctor doesn’t believe you, you look up your symptoms online and become your own best health advocate. When you find something that sounds like your symptoms, you print out the information and hand it to your doctor.

This can give your doctor the idea that you think he’s incompetent and make the doctor-patient relationship that much more strained. A patient who looks up his or her symptoms online may also be referred to as a ‘cyberchondriac’. Not only is the fact that you’re printing out health information from the Internet making him feel stupid, it is also further reinforces his belief that you have some kind of mental illness.

There’s nothing wrong with being your own health advocate. As a matter of fact, you should. However, if you are going to bring in information you’ve found online, make sure it’s from a website your doctor would consider reputable.

Clinical, scientific studies written by medical professionals will be much better-received than random articles from a start-up blog.

Your Diet and Lifestyle are Making You Sick

There isn’t a doctor in the world that can help you if you’re not willing to understand the role you play in your own chronic health problems.
If you’re suffering from any type of chronic illness, your diet and lifestyle play a critical role.

Here’s what I mean:

  • Diet

A junk food diet filled with synthetic additives and preservatives can do serious harm to your health. Your immune system was designed to protect you from viruses, bacteria, and foreign invaders. If you’re eating a diet filled with trans fats, aspartame, food dyes, BHT, BHA, and other chemicals your body can’t process, your immune system will have to work overtime to protect you. This can result in a malfunctioning immune system, autoimmune disease, and chronic inflammation and pain.

That’s why if you suffer from any type of autoimmune or chronic pain condition, you must clean up your diet. Slowly wean off junk food (it’s a drug, you don’t want to give it up cold turkey) and replace it with healthier fare. Organic vegetables, fruit, nuts, nut butters, seeds, beans, meat, poultry, wild-caught fish, and healing fats like coconut oil, olive oil, and butter give you the anti-inflammatory nutrition your body needs to heal.

Food allergies and nutrient deficiencies are two other common dietary causes of autoimmune disease and chronic pain. Gluten, a protein found in wheat, barley, and rye is indigestible to 1 out of every 100 people. Cutting it from your diet for a period of 6-8 weeks to see if your symptoms improve could change your life. Nutrient deficiencies can be treated by a whole-food multivitamin, organic vegetable juicing, or both.

  • Environment

Chronic illness is no doubt exacerbated by the incredible array of chemicals in our everyday environment. Cleaning products, cosmetics, air fresheners, fluoride toothpaste, and mercury from vaccines and your water supply can cause low-grade allergic reactions that result in autoimmune disease. The parabens, phthalates, formaldehyde, and bleach in your everyday household products are endocrine-disrupting and immune system destroying. The less synthetic chemicals in your environment, the better.

  • Lifestyle

The amount of exercise you get (or don’t get), the amount of alcohol you consume, whether or not you smoke, and the type of drugs you’re taking all have a profound impact on your health. If there’s any part of your lifestyle right now that you’re able to change to relieve your chronic pain, you owe it to yourself to make those changes.

Not Every Doctor Thinks You’re a Hypochondriac

Not every doctor out there thinks you suffer from a mental health problem just because you’re sick and they can’t figure out what’s causing it. As a matter of fact, there are plenty of doctors whose first order of business is to teach you dietary and lifestyle changes that could reverse your chronic disease and eliminate your need for synthetic pain management.

Most naturopathic and many osteopathic doctors treat you like a whole person, not just a series of symptoms. Instead of spending 45 minutes in a waiting room and 5 minutes with your doctor, you’ll spend 45 minutes to an hour speaking with a more holistic-minded doctor.

They’ll assess your entire health history, your diet, your lifestyle, your medications, your supplements, and even your physical and emotional environment. You’ll likely be tested for food and environmental allergies, issues often overlooked in the conventional mode of healthcare.

My health was so poor by the time I stumbled into a naturopath’s office eleven years ago I was at my wit’s end. The man took one look at me and said that food was killing me. Turns out he was right. I have celiac disease and ITP. Since discovering the connection between food, environment, and health, I’ve made it my mission to inform others how much control they really have over their health.

If you’re suffering from chronic illness, you have other options besides continually trying to get the same doctor to believe you. If your doctor thinks you’re crazy, changing your approach with him may help but it will be difficult to turn things around if he refuses to be more open-minded.

Book an appointment with a naturopathic physician in your area or talk to an osteopathic physician online. Learn how you can heal the natural way without drugs and surgery. When you do this, you may be able to get off the prescription drug roller coaster and finally get on with your life!