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Sometimes a Pipe is Just a Pipe

Numan M. Gharaibeh

Glastonbury, CT 06033 – USA

Email : n_gharaibeh@yahoo.com

 

    In my residency days I was told: “there is no such thing as good patients and bad patients, there is only good doctors and bad doctors.” To this day, I don’t know if that was my supervisor own idea or was he quoting someone else. During that time, I took that statement with respect and reverence paid only to scriptures. Later on, I discovered there is no good and bad, just a mixture of the two (plus a point of view of an observer-the beholder).

 

    However, let us presume for the sake of simplicity that there is good and bad. Since both doctors and patients are human, why is it that one can be bad but not the other? Is there anything to stand in the way of patients’ behaving as “good or bad?” As long as there is good and bad psychiatrists, there will be good and bad patients. Not only that but the full spectrum of the mix in between.

 

    A bad patient is definitely a value judgment. An example of what we secretly call bad patient is the one coming to the emergency room for the twentieth time for ‘scratching’ her or his “forearms,” (not wrists). Whether we care to admit or not we stop taking that patient seriously- he or she will not command the same attention as someone who is just out of the Intensive Care Unit following his or her first suicide attempt at age 55.

 

    The idea of psychiatrists or therapists using their own feelings towards certain patients as a diagnostic tool should be taken with skepticism if not suspicion. We may all have at one point or another felt guilty for having strong ‘counter-transference’ reactions to certain types of patients. I believe it to be arrogance on my part to use those reactions as “objective” data to tell me something about a particular patient.

 

    In DSM-IV, the ‘conscious creation’ of symptoms for some identified gain is referred to as malingering. Whether to get acquitted of a crime, get admitted to a hospital, get worker’s compensations, get a drug of abuse by prescription, or whatever other material gain. I was taught to feel guilty about our negative emotions toward manipulative patients. I was taught to control my feelings and thoughts since they must contaminate the therapeutic process, coming from that deep dark place called “counter-transference.” A good psychiatrist must be the masters of his or her ‘counter-transference,” I was told.

 

    I came across psychiatrists and therapists who believed that the psychiatrist should make use of his or her emotions as a diagnostic tool (i.e. if some patient makes them feel in a certain way then that is diagnostic of certain pathology-usually a personality disorder). Somewhere along the way we got the mixed message that our feelings are both subjective ‘counter-transference’ and ‘objective’ tests.

 

    Different scales were devised to make our field look more “scientific,” and “objective.” A questionnaire, such as MMPI, is now considered (by some magical logic) as objective data. In a culture that worships numbers, it is enough to come up with ‘scores’ to be considered “objective,” “empirical,” and “scientific.” 

 

    It seems that a psychiatrist’s feelings can be either subjective or objective depending on his or her stature in the hierarchy of the profession. Freud’s feelings were definitely objective data (any respected psychiatrist dares to say otherwise?). The professor’s feelings are more objective than the fourth year resident’s, and the third year resident’s feelings are more objective than the first year resident.

 

    If a patient smokes a pipe, he, or she is smoking a “phallic symbol.” However, if the doctor (e.g. Freud or a contemporary equivalent) smokes the pipe, then it is just a “pipe.”

 

Document Code VP.0040

Numan.SometimesaPipeisJustaPipe

ÊÑãíÒ ÇáãÓÊäÏ  VP.0040

 

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