My guess is that you can almost certainly learn enough to be very helpful in decision-making about your condition.
“Helpful in decision-making” is a curious way of speaking about mental health. In it’s core mental health is about changing what the patient does and not about the doctor.
For a lot of mental health issues it matters whether a patient feels agency.
My guess is that you can almost certainly learn enough to be very helpful in decision-making about your condition. I wouldn’t bother with the primary literature though
Don’t underrate primary literature. Reading it can help you to build understanding of what the disease is about. There are a lot of details that get stripped out in reviews.
“Helpful in decision-making” is a curious way of speaking about mental health.
For clarity, I meant “learn enough to be very helpful to you in your decision-making about your condition”, rather than useful to the doctor. (Which is not to say that it might not also be helpful to the doctor.)
For a lot of mental health issues it matters whether a patient feels agency.
Yes, absolutely—so for mental health issues it can be particularly helpful to learn enough about your situation and possible interventions so that you can be more involved in the decisions about them, rather than the locus of control lying with the clinician.
“Helpful in decision-making” is a curious way of speaking about mental health. In it’s core mental health is about changing what the patient does and not about the doctor.
For a lot of mental health issues it matters whether a patient feels agency.
Don’t underrate primary literature. Reading it can help you to build understanding of what the disease is about. There are a lot of details that get stripped out in reviews.
For clarity, I meant “learn enough to be very helpful to you in your decision-making about your condition”, rather than useful to the doctor. (Which is not to say that it might not also be helpful to the doctor.)
Yes, absolutely—so for mental health issues it can be particularly helpful to learn enough about your situation and possible interventions so that you can be more involved in the decisions about them, rather than the locus of control lying with the clinician.