this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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The obstacles we have to overcome in order to access care is unacceptable. I'm in the US, please share your experiences if you live elsewhere.

Finding care -service providers, both primary care AND mental/behavioral health, are generally ignorant about neurodivergence in general, and adult neurodivergence, women neurodivergence, non-white neurodivergence, and comorbidity especially. -databases have limited information, much of it boiler plate and suspicious (specializes in ADHD and autism my ass). -providers generally require a phone call (let's be real, many multiple phone calls) in order to set up an initial appointment instead of everything being coordinated online which you would think would be easier but noooOOOooo. Also no one answers the phone and they will never call you back. If they call you back it will be at the worst time, also calling me is an act of violence against me, I need to emotionally prepare for a phone call, make a script etc. Also I don't answer unknown numbers and they call back from a different number, then leave a message and then don't answer when you call back. -if an email is provided, no one ever gets back to you -still often telehealth isn't offered which is insane -can you speak to them between sessions, text or email them? -do they provide medication management? Will they treat you like a drug abuser every time you request a refill or feel they aren't helping as much anymore? Do they know about all the different options, the latest research, additional medications that can be used in conjunction? -the next available appointment is 6 months from now -assessments are only performed by a small set of providers. You don't get the questions beforehand to prepare and they don't want you to ask clarifying questions(??))???)?)?)??!!). You are forced to make a quick black and white decision for a complex nuanced concept. These decisions are used to judge you and control your access to support and care. -oh yeah there isn't any support anyway -is this service covered by my health insurance? ¯⁠\⁠(⁠°⁠_⁠o⁠)⁠/⁠¯ if it is, do they do the paperwork? Or will they make you pay and then fill out forms and call your insurance to coordinate reimbursement? ( Real experience I've had)

Maintaining Care -if you miss an appointment or want to reschedule too close you'll be charged

  • in person care means dressing, hygiene care, planning, transportation, interacting with strangers -did you remember to fill out the forms and send them in? Or bring them? -remember everything you needed to bring up, have written down notes and remember where you put them or that they exist, remember what what you wrote down means. -are they dismissive? Are they going to judge you? Are they going to understand what you're saying the way it sounds in your head but never gets translated out of your mouth? -are they aware of all the latest research? Do they understand the nuanced ways comorbidities interact and can obscure symptoms? Do they understand masking? Do they know what questions to ask that you don't know to think about?

This world is so unforgiving and structured to make our lives harder, it what's feels like a knife to my chest whenever I have to deal with care providers who gave zero accommodations for the people they servehas if they truly understand nothing about the conditions people are living under. There are so exceedingly few qualified providers, if I want any care at all I have to put up with it.

What did I miss in my rant?

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

I was diagnosed as a kid. My dad didn't believe the Dr. so he spent my childhood telling me it was all a lie, so I believed him. Dr didn't mention anything about therapy so I just had to rawdog ADHD for a while. It did not go well. Stopped taking my meds in middle school.

Flash forward a long time and I can accept that I have ADHD now. Go back to my PCP and ask to start meds again but actually get therapy this time. First thing he said was "ADHD usually goes away when you become an adult". I explained that was nice but it didn't for me and I'm still really struggling. He said he'd be willing to prescribe the meds but he wants a new diagnosis since the previous one is so old. He gives me a referral to some place that has a 9 month wait.

Obviously I missed that appointment.

I waited like two years before I was able to get going again. Went back to my PCP, same story. This time I saw a different one though, and he gave me a different referral. Had to wait like two months for an opening, then saw someone. Turns out it was just a social worker for some kind of intake evaluation.

The social worker said I needed to come back in "at least one month" before I could see a therapist. Just like... show up one day and ask for a walk in appointment and when (not if) they don't have one they'll schedule you for an appointment. Why can't we schedule it now? Fuck you that's why.

I waited six months before being able to schedule it. I finally see the guy and he's all in on emdr. Turns out he is an OCD specialist and has never done any work with an ADHD patient before. I really just didn't like this guy, he jumped straight in with "so what do you want to fix about yourself? You just procrastinate, right?" and idk what I was expecting but it wasn't that.

Went back to my PCP (like a year later) and he gave me a different referral to a therapist who does work with ADHD patients and his own patients go to this person and they are happy with them.

I have to redo the social worker intake part again because it's been too long since the last one. I'm currently on this step.

And the worst part is every single step along the way people are like "wHy DiD yOu wAiT sO lOOnG fROm " and i have to stop from screaming, "because i have ADHD you ignorant fucks, this why I'm here in the first god damn place!"

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Once you have 'care' you're at the mercy of your insurance companies that hold up your prior authorization every year (yeah it's annual and they've gotten it for years but somehow always take just enough time for your meds to run out, inducing withdraw.) Don't forget, somehow, pharmaceutical companies can't keep up with regular orders and can be 'out of stock' indefinitely. Have had a pharmacist say "well we only had enough for 23, is that okay? Lol.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 year ago

Omg yeah, and if you change jobs you'll have a month or more where everything is fucked up, none of your providers are covered anymore and they send you on goose chases on the phone for 6 hours only to hang up on you and you have to start over.

My meds currently are 7 days separate due to a shortage I have to either go without for a week or not forget to go back when they finally get it back in stock. I'm signed up for text alerts when the script is filled but I never get any texts, only some bullshit video link that looked sketchy AF where they talked about the risks of stimulants. Thanks cvs.