Articles for tag: conceptseducationmental statemethod

The Mental State Examination: What’s That?

If you have ever been assessed by a psychiatrist, you would probably have undergone a Mental State Examination. You probably did not realise it at the time. There were no needles, no scans, no machines. Instead, there was a conversation, and someone watching and listening with particular care. The Mental State Examination is to psychiatry what a physical examination is to the rest of medicine. It is the way a psychiatrist gathers evidence about what is happening in a person’s mind right now and over previous days to months. And how it is done—and how it is written down—matters far

What Does Psychiatric Diagnosis Really Mean?

When someone goes to a doctor, they usually want two things: to understand what is wrong, and to know what can be done about it. The name given to the problem is the diagnosis. But how that name is arrived at, and what it actually means for the person living with it, is often a mystery. This piece is about that mystery. It separates two things that are usually tangled together: the process of finding an answer, and the meaning of the answer once it is found. For more detailed work on this topic, see: Understanding Diagnostics in Diagnosis: The