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Prejudice within

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Ayesha S. Ahmed*
Affiliation:
Bradgate Mental Health Unit, Glenfield General Hospital, Leicester, email: ayeshasahmed25@yahoo.co.uk
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Abstract

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Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2007

Recently during one of my on calls I had to ring the emergency medical number because a young patient on clozapine suddenly became hypotensive, hypoxic and unresponsive. The attitude of my medical colleagues who came to attend the patient left me feeling perturbed and belittled. I have had similar experiences while covering the A&E department and was often asked how we managed to engage patients with psychosis and obtain information from them. I was never sure if this was praise for me or put down for my patients.

Antipathy towards psychiatry among medical professionals is well known. Silence and resignation from the psychiatric community have done nothing to decrease the stigma or the discrimination and prejudice. Psychiatry also faces stigma from within. I say this because I had difficulty coming to terms with my own mental illness.

My symptoms of depression started in early 2004, but I attributed them to a number of causes - house move, new job, bad week, a stressful day and even bad weather. I was diagnosed with depression a few months later and prescribed antidepressants. I was not willing to accept that I had depression. Comments that I had heard about others like ‘it doesn't take her long to flip’ and ‘it's not depression, it's personality disorder’ echoed through my mind. I stopped taking my antidepressants and even asked a colleague if she thought I had personality disorder.

Things came to a head and I had to take time off work. A close friend, on finding out that I had depression remarked, ‘I thought you were a strong person.’ I was ashamed and did not want people to know about my illness. Then came the anger. I was angry because I did not have a scar or a deranged report to show for my illness. Why was psychiatry still in the dark ages? I had failed me. My fraternity had failed me. With time and help I improved and then came the guilt. I realised that I had no right to lecture people about stigma and recognition of mental illness. I was as bad as them - no I was even worse. I had doubt about my suitability as a trainee psychiatrist, but with time came acceptance. I realised how lucky I was to get timely help and thought of people who for months and sometimes years do not get any validation of their suffering.

Now, a year later, I am comfortable with my illness. I hope to come off my antidepressant in the near future. I would not wish it on anyone but it has taught me a lot. I have grown as a person. I hope I don't have a relapse but if I do, I am confident that I will overcome it with the help of my family, friends, my doctor and last but certainly not the least my will power, because I am a strong person. Depression has made me strong.

Acknowledging the existence of prejudice is the first step towards overcoming it. Reticence is the next hurdle.

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