Psychiatric Expert Witness

 
Home   
Articles   
Psychiatric Expert Witness

Psychiatry and Panic Attacks

There is a large amount of debate regarding psychiatry and panic attacks. While many believe that medication is the answer, some believe that medication only masks the problem.

If you have ever experienced the intense feeling of short breath, sudden sweat, and an overall sense that you cannot move, you may have gone through an anxiety episode. Those people that deal with this sort of condition on a regular basis may have a mental disorder that causes physical disruptions. The relationship between psychiatry and panic attacks is one of a quick diagnosis with a quicker prescription for medication, though this may not be the answer.

Most people that have been forced to combat feelings of panic have some type of subconscious fear provoking physical reactions. The mere fact that these people are dealing with deeper issues should be enough to encourage doctors to probe deeper into the meaning behind these attacks. However, the field of psychiatry tends to support handing out various prescriptions in order to battle these feelings. The problem is that once medication has successfully provided a way for a patient to avoid having anxious feelings, the true cause of these emotions will be forever buried.

While some psychiatrists will simply try to medicate upon immediate diagnosis, others will seek the root of the actual problem. Many believe that a combination of both methods is the best course of action when trying to cure this type of condition. Then again, some within the medical field feel that medication has no place within this scenario, and that psychiatry and panic attacks have nothing to do with one another. Regardless of various opinions, more and more Americans are taking medication in order to fight these powerful physical feelings.



Interestingly, this type of physical episode is often mistaken for another illness, which is part of the reason why many psychiatrists have a hard time diagnosing this ailment. Often, these attacks come and go without warning leaving patients entirely confused as to the actual cause of the condition.

Psychiatry and panic attacks may, or may not, be properly intertwined, though much will depend upon future studies. As it stands, more and more research into this condition is being conducted as many Americans begin to suffer the aforementioned ailments. There is some hope that this type of condition will be properly cured (and diagnosed) at some point within the near future.

<< Back to Psychiatry Articles

Copyright 2008 Psychiatric Expert Witness. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy