Psychosis & Bipolar Disorder: Signs & Treatment | Dr. Manuel Sánchez de Carmona |

Dr. Manuel Sánchez de Carmona, Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at Anahuac University Mexico City, and mental health educator Victoria Maxwell discuss and answer your questions on psychosis and bipolar disorder, drawing from their lived and clinical experiences. Hosted by Dr. Emma Morton.
00:00 Introduction
08:25 Main Psychotic Features (Delusions/Hallucinations)
10:04 What Psychosis in Mania Feels Like
11:41 Psychosis: “It's a Progressive State”
13:00 Treating Psychosis, Early Detection Is Key
18:11 Psychosis Is REAL for the Person
21:08 Manuel's Top Tips to Prevent Psychosis
23:20 Importance of Grounding Yourself
25:09 Remember: “Psychosis Will Pass”
26:33 How to Care for Loved Ones in Psychosis
29:13 The First Step to Help A Loved One in Psychosis
33:31 Schizoaffective vs. Bipolar Disorder
35:15 Is Psychosis the Highest Form of Mania?
37:20 Psychosis in Mixed States
40:12 A Message to Loved Ones Who Are Hurt
42:21 Forgiving Yourself After Psychosis
47:52 Should I Tell My Dr About My Psychosis?
51:11 Does Childhood Trauma Cause Psychosis?
55:21 The Future of Psychosis Treatment
More on this episode: talkBD.live/psychosis
#talkBD Bipolar Disorder Podcast
talkBD gathers researchers, people with lived experience, healthcare providers, and top bipolar disorder experts from around the world to discuss and answer the most important questions about living with bipolar disorder. Our episodes are available on all podcast platforms:
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Learn more about talkBD: talkBD.live
Dr. Manuel Sánchez de Carmona is a member of the ISBD Board of Directors and works as an associate professor of Clinical Psychiatry for the Anahuac University in Mexico City, Mexico. He began his involvement with ISBD in 2008 as the founder of the ISBD Mexican Chapter and since then in key leadership roles: first as ISBD Secretary Treasurer and then as ISBD President, serving for two consecutive terms from March 2014 to December 2017. He was able to actively promote the Society and generate local chapters in several countries of Latin America, Asia, and Europe. He is passionate about providing education on bipolar disorders and using the Society as a game-changer in public mental health services. Since World Bipolar Day’s inception, he has been involved in its global promotion and making connections with experts with the lived experience to generate community awareness and fight stigma. Dr. Sanchez de Carmona has more than 25 years of clinical experience treating mood disorders and is interested in diagnosis, early detection, and providing quality of life to patients.
Since being diagnosed with bipolar disorder, psychosis, and anxiety, Victoria Maxwell has become one of North America’s top speakers and educators on the lived experience of mental illness and recovery, dismantling stigma and returning to work after a psychiatric disorder. As a performer, her funny, powerful messages about mental wellness create lasting change in individuals and organizations. By sharing her story of mental illness and recovery she makes the uncomfortable comfortable, the confusing understandable. The Mental Health Commission of Canada named her keynote That’s Just Crazy Talk as one of the top anti-stigma interventions in the country.

Пікірлер: 73

  • @ctrl20xx
    @ctrl20xx Жыл бұрын

    This was great. Psychosis and hospitalization brought about my diagnosis at 45 years old. Hearing it described so closely to my experience helps me accept it and the diagnosis are real.

  • @yarashalambenisrael8697

    @yarashalambenisrael8697

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sharing this with my wife and family.

  • @karenlbful

    @karenlbful

    9 ай бұрын

    I also had my first manic episode at 42.

  • @JJ-yh4nd
    @JJ-yh4nd8 ай бұрын

    I love this video. I think another important point is that psychosis isn’t always related to childhood trauma. Psychosis surrounding false narratives about trauma in childhood which aren’t disputed by fact based reality, can perpetuate psychotic states, which can destroy otherwise healthy family systems which were intact, before the person experiencing psychosis became psychotic. It’s very important for a trusted loved one who can substantiate fact based experiences from childhood to work alongside a trusted therapist to help the person experiencing psychosis get better.

  • @brianadams6204
    @brianadams6204 Жыл бұрын

    My 26 year old daughter is going thru this now and I am scared to death.

  • @CRESTBD

    @CRESTBD

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi Brian, just wanted to highlight a part in this episode addressing how to help a loved one in psychosis, if you haven’t seen it already. Take care ❤️: kzread.info/dash/bejne/iJNs0ZSxadDfg6w.html

  • @LBright4444

    @LBright4444

    9 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @kanwalraja466

    @kanwalraja466

    9 ай бұрын

    How is she now, give as much love to her as u can and take care of her food ,

  • @rubylane9867

    @rubylane9867

    5 ай бұрын

    I can understand how you feel. I hope she gets appropriate help that she needs. I have been through this with my daughter had an episode 3months ago. I was very scared but i soon realised pyscosis is manageable with antipschosis drugs. medication. Now she is stable and receiving mental health support alongside family support. All i can suggest is to be calm and be hopeful and supportive. Your daughter's mental state will be stable. Good luck

  • @camm8832

    @camm8832

    4 ай бұрын

    My daughter is 23 and stopped taking meds so I’m so worried and. It sure what to do now as she had rapid cycling mania last time very scary .

  • @suzannaturner299
    @suzannaturner2992 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the discussion. It seems those who have Bipolar, even in my support group for those with depression and Bipolar, psychosis was never discussed. I felt so alone in the pain of a major episode 10 yrs last month and this aniversary really hit me. I seriously could have ended my life in a major car crash but thank God no one else was hurt and I only had 4 bruises to show for it. I left $60k of property damage but that could be fixed. The trauma of that experience still haunts me to this day. Still continuing to take my medication and in therapy.

  • @7oztee
    @7oztee Жыл бұрын

    I have experienced psychosis many times from my bipolar

  • @7oztee
    @7oztee Жыл бұрын

    Parallel reality I love that. Psychosis is not a good word

  • @Luna1917a
    @Luna1917a3 ай бұрын

    Experiencing an episode can be scary, unsettling. I have experienced the gamut of psychosis and thankfully my husband has been my grounding partner ❤

  • @beth2979
    @beth2979 Жыл бұрын

    This is great content... informative, honest, and compassionate. Thank you

  • @CRESTBD

    @CRESTBD

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you :)

  • @BerlyDza
    @BerlyDza8 ай бұрын

    This is the best advice I've seen yet. 29:13 The First Step to Help A Loved One in Psychosis: "Be careful, try not to be pushy, try to be patient, listen. First listen and listen and listen. You need to LISTEN first. And then try to find a space in which you can actually give help. It's like going fishing. You have to be patient, you have to remain stable. You will see the cue for you to jump in. What's the key point where you can say "I can help you, make you feel better"? Don't get into talking about the delusional idea. Don't try to say "that is not real". If he or she pushes you to say "is this happening?" don't say "it is not happening". You say "it is happening to you in your brain, and I want you to know that I feel that you're afraid or that you're feeling happy for that." So they need to be empathized [with], and they need to feel that you understand them. That's a first step. Seek first to understand and listen, and then take action."

  • @CRESTBD

    @CRESTBD

    8 ай бұрын

    ❤️

  • @austyn5004
    @austyn50042 ай бұрын

    Within the first 17m, I just had 80% of my questions on psychosis answered that my psyche couldn’t. Apparently I’ve been psychotic quite a few times in the past 5 years and NO ONE had any idea, including myself. Just like Victoria, my psychotic features were presented during mania and they weren’t scary AT ALL. If anything, it helped me grow into my faith more lol. 😂

  • @yarashalambenisrael8697
    @yarashalambenisrael8697 Жыл бұрын

    I have Emotionally drained my Wife and children, I was diagnosed 2001 with Bipolar 1 and I stopped taking my medication in 2014, Big Mistake August 8th can't come soon enough 😢

  • @DouglasGross6022

    @DouglasGross6022

    10 ай бұрын

    Are you doing better, I hope?

  • @neilfleck4178

    @neilfleck4178

    Ай бұрын

    I stopped my anti-depressants for about a month,(a)bout the same not a goo d idea

  • @rosecoleman1621
    @rosecoleman1621 Жыл бұрын

    I just got out of the hospital. I have biopalor mania dulishions hallucinations it's tough I'm scared.

  • @kenadams5504

    @kenadams5504

    Жыл бұрын

    Dont worry , you can do it.

  • @yizhenqiu8450

    @yizhenqiu8450

    Жыл бұрын

    Curious how long did it take you to lose the delusion? My wife is in one right now and day 3 on medication, still has heavy delusions

  • @monicadahl7715
    @monicadahl771511 ай бұрын

    There is hope ,healing and creative expression in bipolar. Lithium and Olanzepine is a Godsend. I wish my son would have taken his meds on time which would have prevented a meltdown. I wish he would do ART like he used to do when young.Exercise also helped Samuel when he was younger!

  • @littlewoodchopper2659

    @littlewoodchopper2659

    10 ай бұрын

    Olanzapine yes. I won't take lithium. Did that at 15

  • @TinySnek

    @TinySnek

    6 ай бұрын

    With all respect and love, please don’t use identifying information about your son online such as his name. I would be absolutely horrified and stop talking to my parent as much if I found out they were publicly posting my name in relation to my illness online. I hope he has a different last name than you or you’ve just given his first and last name out. Please remove his info, you can edit your post ❤

  • @artisreality

    @artisreality

    4 ай бұрын

    I think there was really a CRICKET in the room!

  • @haveyouflossedtoday
    @haveyouflossedtoday8 ай бұрын

    My son just turned 20 last month. He was dating a very nice beautiful girl, but then the next thing I hear is he is dating someone else new. She said they were just friends until she got him to break up with his girlfriend. She is very smart and seems down to earth. Dressed very shabbily. She is 20, turning 21. Somewhat unattractive, unhealthy level of overweight, and will only eat chicken nuggets. I’ve never seen her eat anything else except coke. I just found out she is bi polar. She got him to move in with her. Demanded a puppy. Then “lost” her job that week. She hasn’t gotten a new job. They have only been “dating” less than six months. My son says he is quitting college to take care of her. They will live in a camper on her family’s property just outside a small town in a very poor county in Tennessee. Son has said before there is a history of abuse in this family. Does anyone have any information for me? These seem like a lot of bad choices piling on top of each other really fast.

  • @theSpiritofSeep

    @theSpiritofSeep

    7 ай бұрын

    Be there for him. He’s making a huge mistake for sure, if he needs financial help to stay with her, don’t give it! My ex wife took advantage of me like this, and eventually reality will hit him. If you can chat about details of his daily life without getting angry or pushing him away, do it. He’s too young to be throwing everything away. But the good thing, is by 26 he will have a revelation. It took me 10 years and now at 34 I am thriving after divorce at 30.

  • @karinadacunha1337

    @karinadacunha1337

    Ай бұрын

    It doesn't sound like Bipolar, sounds like Boderline Personality Disorder.

  • @mistressofstones

    @mistressofstones

    Ай бұрын

    None of those things are exclusive to people with mental illness. Both people with and without a diagnosis can be bad partners. Really unsure what you thinking she is fat and ugly has to do with all of this, that part just sounds like you being nasty lol

  • @veziculorile
    @veziculorile Жыл бұрын

    I couldn’t hear Victoria very well. Why didn’t anyone bring it up? The fact nobody mentioned anything to her makes me fear that maybe I’m in mania now because I could not hear Victoria at all! Her voice was so muffled. 😮

  • @trinaellison651

    @trinaellison651

    Жыл бұрын

    Haha no it’s not your mania! I could barely understand her!

  • @rubylane9867

    @rubylane9867

    5 ай бұрын

    Its not your mental state. I didnt hear Victoria well i even increased the volume high but still it didnt work

  • @ismanovska
    @ismanovska10 ай бұрын

    How do you get them to the ER?? Pple in psychosis dont like to go..that is why my mother is homeless right now. 😢

  • @DouglasGross6022

    @DouglasGross6022

    10 ай бұрын

    Police?

  • @kevinsmith8076

    @kevinsmith8076

    10 ай бұрын

    @@DouglasGross6022they have to be a harm to oneself or others. The system is fed up. Currently trying to figure out what’s wrong with my brother.

  • @DouglasGross6022

    @DouglasGross6022

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kevinsmith8076 You have my sympathy. My (ex?) girlfriend is no longer getting meds for a psychotic break. She believes that the hallucinations she had were real and that *I caused them!* So she doesn't trust me and won't talk to me. She revoked her consent to let me talk to her doctor. I have no idea what to do.

  • @kanwalraja466

    @kanwalraja466

    9 ай бұрын

    @@kevinsmith8076these people need love more than the others, talk to them , love them , they will hear u

  • @ismanovska

    @ismanovska

    8 ай бұрын

    @@kevinsmith8076 yep, they won't do anything unless they commit crime or try to kill themselves. Mental health in usa is ooc😑

  • @ZestySea
    @ZestySea Жыл бұрын

    Hello from Australia

  • @CRESTBD

    @CRESTBD

    Жыл бұрын

    Hello Ria, thanks for tuning in!

  • @cybercab
    @cybercab10 ай бұрын

    When people say it’s “very treatable” that seems overly optimistic. After 20 meds I would say it’s been…at best…problematic. Best of luck to all.

  • @Lonta54
    @Lonta54 Жыл бұрын

    I honestly didnt realize i was having psychosis. Just thought i was the whole universe stuck in this body. 🤔

  • @ismanovska

    @ismanovska

    10 ай бұрын

    How did you get out of it? My mother is homeless now due to this and I.dont know how to help her she's highly paranoid of Dr's cops therapist

  • @DouglasGross6022

    @DouglasGross6022

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@ismanovskaHave you talked to police or doctors? You can try to get a court ordered psychiatric hold.

  • @DouglasGross6022
    @DouglasGross602210 ай бұрын

    The crickets!

  • @patrickmurray279
    @patrickmurray2798 ай бұрын

    This is a great video. Also watch Bipolarcast KZread. They talk about the ketogenic diet and how it can help elevate bipolar symptoms. Very powerful diet for mental health. First developed for children with epilepsy.

  • @MegaREAPER56

    @MegaREAPER56

    3 ай бұрын

    😮

  • @dmtdreamz7706
    @dmtdreamz7706 Жыл бұрын

    Love is what allows you to move millions of people, to rally them, to inspire them, to give them a vision to do something, love is what allows you to land someone on the moon, love is what allows you to tackle slavery or oppression of other sorts, love is what allows you to care about the environment, clean up the environment, to create better schools and that's ultimately all that people want. What do people want in the world? They want to be able to love. To love their family, to love their children, to love their nation and then to go beyond that and smoke DMT.

  • @oceaniasmith2205
    @oceaniasmith2205 Жыл бұрын

    Why is there no cure?

  • @AnthZee8

    @AnthZee8

    7 ай бұрын

    Because in this point of time modern science haven't found a cure or even close to it. In the future most likely it will come

  • @spockthevulcan
    @spockthevulcan Жыл бұрын

    CAn psychosis take over for a few months and make an introvert extremely gregarious to the point of spending thousands at strip clubs and having lots of sex with multiple strippers, then the "urge" go away as quickly as it came on,. I'm concerned another hightened and porlonged hypomania or psychosis is coming on because of a horrific lack of sleep/insomnia.

  • @honeyfurfarm2182

    @honeyfurfarm2182

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes it can.

  • @karimaogden3875

    @karimaogden3875

    7 ай бұрын

    That kind of risky behavior is called "Hypersexuality" and is a classic symptom of mania. I hope you got tested for STDs.

  • @mistressofstones

    @mistressofstones

    Ай бұрын

    That's mania

  • @TAKIhmb
    @TAKIhmb5 ай бұрын

    sound qualite are so shity

  • @lauraholladay
    @lauraholladay Жыл бұрын

    not anweird. DYK fake

  • @amills9261
    @amills9261 Жыл бұрын

    That sounds so terrible. It’s impossible to listen

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