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General Parenting
Horrible and scary weekend
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<blockquote data-quote="smallworld" data-source="post: 336267" data-attributes="member: 2423"><p>I agree with everyone else -- this is an emergency situation. Your son needs help NOW.</p><p></p><p>If you choose not to admit him to a psychiatric hospital today, at the very least you need to call the psychiatrist and tell him what happened so you can get your difficult child in for an emergency appointment. He needs medication changes ASAP.</p><p></p><p>The medications he's on could very well be making him WORSE. If the psychiatrist is thinking bipolar disorder and your difficult child is taking an SSRI (Zoloft) or a stimulant (Vyvanse) or even Intuniv, they could be revving him up instead of calming him down. </p><p>This is not a time to worry about consequences or homework or even what your husband is thinking. This is a time to get your difficult child the help he needs.</p><p></p><p>Hang in there and hugs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="smallworld, post: 336267, member: 2423"] I agree with everyone else -- this is an emergency situation. Your son needs help NOW. If you choose not to admit him to a psychiatric hospital today, at the very least you need to call the psychiatrist and tell him what happened so you can get your difficult child in for an emergency appointment. He needs medication changes ASAP. The medications he's on could very well be making him WORSE. If the psychiatrist is thinking bipolar disorder and your difficult child is taking an SSRI (Zoloft) or a stimulant (Vyvanse) or even Intuniv, they could be revving him up instead of calming him down. This is not a time to worry about consequences or homework or even what your husband is thinking. This is a time to get your difficult child the help he needs. Hang in there and hugs. [/QUOTE]
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Horrible and scary weekend
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