The following questions, grouped by
symptoms, can help the counselor identify individuals
who may have psychiatric illness. By no means should
a counselor routinely ask all of these questions. Instead,
her or she should determine which of these symptoms are
most relevant and ask appropriate questions based on
the family/psychiatric history. The counselor should
refer an individual suspected to have significant psychiatric
symptoms for a psychiatric evaluation.
Have you had a period of a week or
more during your life when you have felt unusually good
or high? Was this clearly different from your usual mood,
so much so that your relatives and friends noticed the
change?
The counselor also may ask questions
about the presence of irritability lasting one week or
more, which is also a symptom of mania that can occur
independent of high moods.
Other features that may characterize
mania include a reduced need to sleep, pressured speech,
racing thoughts, grandiosity, distractibility, increased
energy and activity, and engagement in risky behaviors.
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Have you ever had a period lasting
at least two weeks when you felt depressed, sad, or hopeless
day in and day out? Was there ever a sustained period
when you were no longer interested in or able to enjoy
your usual activities?
Other features that characterize depression
include increased or decreased appetite, weight loss
or gain, insomnia or hypersomnia, psychomotor agitation
or retardation, feelings of worthlessness or excessive
guilt, diminished concentration, loss of interest in
normal activities, reduced energy, and suicidal thoughts.
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Have you ever had the experience of
hearing people talking to you or about you when no one
was present? Have you ever thought that people were following
you, conspiring against you, or monitoring your activities?
(The genetic counselor should attempt to determine if
such an event in fact occurred.) Have you ever had thoughts
that were not your own but were implanted in your mind?
Other pertinent symptoms of psychosis
include
- hallucinations in other modalities
(visual, tactile, gustatory, olfactory);
- delusions (any belief that an individual
now holds or at one time held with great conviction
that clearly is not true); and
- psychotic symptoms (may include
incoherent speech, avolition or amotivation, catatonia,
and flat or blunted affect).
Keep in mind that psychosis can occur
in depression, mania, schizophrenia, schizoaffective
disorder, and brief psychotic disorder. Psychosis also
can occur in the context of medical conditions such as
hyperthyroidism and can result from exposure to illicit
drugs or medications.
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Symptoms of anxiety can manifest in
a variety of ways, including
Excessive worry: Do you have a tendency
to worry excessively about minor things, and are you
unable to stop yourself from worrying throughout the
day?
Excessive worry is the core feature
of generalized anxiety disorder, specifically when accompanied
by other symptoms such as irritability, fatigue, tension,
an inability to relax, and poor concentration.
Panic attack: The counselor might ask
the client directly if he or she has panic attacks. The
client may describe abrupt onset of terror occurring
out of the blue and associated with a variety of physical
symptoms, including heart palpitations, difficulty catching
his or her breath, or a feeling that he or she will die
or go crazy. Panic attacks characteristically last less
than 30 minutes.
Phobia: Do you have any phobias or
unusually strong fears?
Specific situations (social or situational)
can result in a phobia, such as a phobia of heights or
a social phobia (for example, fear of eating in public).
Agoraphobia is a fear of being away from safety, with
the feeling that something dreadful will happen if the
individual enters an "unsafe" place.
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