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Anxiety /depression in podiatric patients

Discussion in 'General Issues and Discussion Forum' started by timharmey, Jan 8, 2012.

  1. timharmey

    timharmey Active Member


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    I was wondering if anyone has access to counselling for patients who present with anxiety/depression which may be impairing their progress with Msk foot pathologies.If so I would be intrested to know if it is benificial? it is something I am becoming intrested in
    Tim
     
  2. i-man

    i-man Member

    Anxiety should be anticipated in every patient that is in your examination table. It's a natural response. When anxiety overwhelms a patient, and the patient loses their ability to percieve their problem and/or treatment program in real terms, that's when expectations and patient satisfaction become an issue. Depression another problem all foot and ankle specialists deal with commonly occurs with patients with chronic diseases such as diabetes, connective tissue disorders, cancers, etc. One of the problems with these patients is adherence to instructions. A part of them wants to get better and another part of them feels it's useless to try. That's when they adversely contribute to the problem. Regardless of which disorder we're talking about, if the best interest of the patient is affected by a psychiatric issue, than it is as much a responsibility of the foot and ankle specialist to direct this patient for counseling as it is for the foot and ankle specialist to deal with their foot/ankle problem.
     
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