I may be reading between the lines too much, but I get the sense that you’re not diagnosed by a psychiatrist, or undergoing treatment. If that’s the case, this might not be the exact area to try to outdo the professionals.
Professionals aren’t allowed to optimize for their patient’s intelligence and productivity, they’re only allowed to prescribe medicines to treat the conditions listed in the DSM, which, sadly, does not recognize the lack of superhuman productivity as a disease.
I don’t think that’s an accurate description of the legal restrictions on doctors. But the legal restrictions are not relevant, only the actual behavior, which has some resemblance to what you say.
As a clinical social worker and a therapist, I can attest to the fact that if you want to bill an insurance company for therapy you have to label the patient/client with a DSM diagnosis.
If one is paying a doctor themselves for medication, there probably is a bit more leeway.
Believe me, I know that high intelligence can skew a professional’s diagnosis. But the underlying disorder is still the same and still treatable with essentially the same methods. You have to shop around a bit anyway to find someone you can work with, and even more so if you are high functioning and cope well.
There’s no reason you can’t do things traditionally as a baseline, and then decide how to proceed; mania is a terrible place to make a decision from.
I may be reading between the lines too much, but I get the sense that you’re not diagnosed by a psychiatrist, or undergoing treatment. If that’s the case, this might not be the exact area to try to outdo the professionals.
Professionals aren’t allowed to optimize for their patient’s intelligence and productivity, they’re only allowed to prescribe medicines to treat the conditions listed in the DSM, which, sadly, does not recognize the lack of superhuman productivity as a disease.
I don’t think that’s an accurate description of the legal restrictions on doctors. But the legal restrictions are not relevant, only the actual behavior, which has some resemblance to what you say.
As a clinical social worker and a therapist, I can attest to the fact that if you want to bill an insurance company for therapy you have to label the patient/client with a DSM diagnosis. If one is paying a doctor themselves for medication, there probably is a bit more leeway.
Believe me, I know that high intelligence can skew a professional’s diagnosis. But the underlying disorder is still the same and still treatable with essentially the same methods. You have to shop around a bit anyway to find someone you can work with, and even more so if you are high functioning and cope well.
There’s no reason you can’t do things traditionally as a baseline, and then decide how to proceed; mania is a terrible place to make a decision from.
This does not fit my anecdotal knowledge of treatment of friends with these disorders who are smart and insightful.
What are you basing your statement on?