

Failure to identify and treat people who double polar disease According to new BBC data, it waste billions of pounds annually in the UK. Experts say many of the estimates of this condition are “descriptions in the system” whose lives are torn to each other due to severe low suicides or high heights, and irregularities.
Emma suffered from bipolar diseases at the age of 30, after suffering a mental health crisis.
When he was 32 weeks, his grandmother died unexpectedly and sent it back to “the lowest level. “I felt unhappy, but the team nearby didn’t get me up,” he said. “They said my signs are not so serious.
When Emma gave birth, her lowest pregnancy was unexpected. He felt amazing in the days after the birth of his child – but his sleeplessness and behavior were irregularly.
A few weeks later, his mood overturned again. When his child was three weeks old, Emma ate a lot of meals.
It took a week from the hospital to the work of the liver. But even after that, he was in the hospital and outside the hospital for a year before he eventually had bipolar diseases, and had a proper medicine.
“If I had the right monitoring, and listened to me during my pregnancy or even earlier, I could have protected myself from getting that excess – 100%,” he said.
It wasn’t Emma’s first experience in poor mental health – he spent teenagers seeing doctors and taking different antidepressants. No one has suggested that there may be bipolar diseases.

Experts have told the BBC how most people with bipolar diseases in the UK “they have few treatments, have not been diagnosed and left to try and stay in a system that has failed.
Most of them, like Emma, eventually suffer from bipolar diseases, initially taking antidepressants by mistake, which makes their symptoms worse, not better. Experts also say there is constant lack of monitoring from general physicians to psychiatrist.
Their warnings come as information, especially with the BBC, shows that the cost of the case in the UK is now estimated at £9.6 billion a year. That is equal to more than £300 for each taxpayer.
This disorder includes the NHS, such as general medical services, psychiatric interviews, A&E visits and hospital admissions. It also includes economic expenditures, such as losing days at work and the needs of the family and friends to get a holiday to provide unofficial surveillance.
But paying comfortable payment does not apply to people who do not leave out outside work, or the cost of police services that deal with those in crisis.
Very treatment is treated
“This number is about 10 billion pounds, in fact, it’s really conservative,” said Professor Judith Simon at Vienna Medical University, who worked with the BBC.
“If this is a government that really wants to try and reduce the bill, then the bipolar disease must be absolute priority, then the goallessness is to actually move the number.
According to the data, up to 372,000 people with bipolar diseases, they are currently out of work and are asking for benefit from the UK.
For a cure, this number can be reduced if proper monitoring is provided, experts say.
“If you want to reduce the cost of a disease, you need to reduce hospital admission and emergency care. If you don’t focus on cutting admission admissions, you will waste money,” said Professor Gudwin, a psychologist at the University of Oxford.
According to the Royal College of Psychiatry (RCP), the disease is two polar diseases in a management case.
Dr. Trudy Seneviratan, a recorder of RCP and the commissioner of the two polar commission, says it will be “completely treated” with a mixture of medication, speech treatment and lifestyle causes.
“But there are many people who suffer in silence with a lower level of symptoms, because there is no good clinical track for them in the UK.
He says that if the bipolar surveillance is suitable for the purpose, it will reduce “social costs” and “the person who is infected with this disease will be infected unnecessarily.
It is this waste of waste – with people who can live a good life but not – that makes the most anger, which they say is an neglected diagnosis.
“It is two common and complex poles and it takes a lot of costs – but it is often recognized,” said Professor Alan Young of the Imperial College.
“People know they’re there, but people are not only not watched only.

The lack of surveillance is that Rose says he was eventually arrested at Stanstede airport for jumping security barriers during a ring in the early 1920s.
“I was completely illusory,” he says. After his arrest, Rosie was taken to the emergency program and was locked in a room. He waited there for more than 12 hours there when a place in a special mental health unit was found.
Roses, like Ima, had been treating mental health problems since childhood, but only after being in the crisis that her condition was introduced. This special stage of mental temptation had begun due to the disruption of the relationship.
He was divided for three months and was admitted to hospital, and then he finally began to find a mixture of drugs he worked for.
The 29-year-old, Rosie, says her menstrual cycle is still high and low, but she says it is much more stable and has the ability to work semi-time.
“I failed,” he says. “My signs have a tutorial book case for the lowest level of two poles and heights – energy-giving and large, irregularly – but no one even considered this identification for me until I was divided.
The costs can be reduced by half.
Maudsley Hospital, south of London, has an intensive care program for the most sick and persistent bipolar patients. The aim of the service is to try and stop the patients from hitting the crisis points.
Similar to services provided in other European countries, the hospital provides a group meeting for patients and their families. Classes help patients understand when a ring may start and then contact the service when they see early notice signs.
They can then enter the hospital clinic and arrange the medicines. The cheap resumption program has dropped by 80 percent because there is interference before a crisis.
Professor Young says the costs related to dual polar diseases can be reduced by more specialized surveillance programs.
“Of course, a specialist treatment can help return many people to work. And we know that work is very good to help people recover from mental health rings.
But many experts say patients are still facing a postcode draw on whether they can see a psychiatrist.
Caroline Chio-Graham, a general physician and professor of public practical research at Kill University, says those who are severely unpleasant are rapidly stored by the crisis teams, but those with “meeting rings less Floride” can lose in sending experts to diagnosis.
“There is a high level of sending,” said Professor Chio Graham. “People really have to be completely unpleasant before they are seen in specialized services. He says general doctors may not be willing to send patients—even if they are strictly suspected of having two polar diseases – for fear of being denied.
“GPS may think I don’t even consider two poles because if I talk about the patient and then I can’t see, I’m slightly stuck.
Professor Young says bipolar patients need chronic specialists.
“But that’s boredom here – although there is strong evidence that specialized care for the patient’s results for the patient, and the cost of the state, there are still few specialized institutions with dual poles.
“That’s a tragedy.
The NHS spokesman said bipolar diseases often could take a long time to diagnose it because it had a different effect and had symptoms similar to other mental health conditions.
“NHS staff are working unbelievable to identify people and reduce the waiting time for monitoring.
“The staff deal with a million more than six years ago and work to change services alongside this request – this will strengthen society’s services, test new mental health centers to open 24/7 and develop mental health crisis lines.
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