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General Parenting
Bipolar disorder in teens
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 214668" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>I'm still having my coffee this morning so I'm not fully awake or alert yet- please forgive me if I'm covering something that's already been discussed. I'm thinking if your son is diagnosis'd as having depression and you think it really is more like bipolar (which I tend to think is a spectrum in itself), you could log down any change in mood, temperment, sleep patterns, behavior, abilities- (such as can he fly through homework some days but struggle and become anxious or frustrated other days), characteristics, such as some days withdrawn but some days excessively talking, etc., and take these to the psychiatrist.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 214668, member: 3699"] I'm still having my coffee this morning so I'm not fully awake or alert yet- please forgive me if I'm covering something that's already been discussed. I'm thinking if your son is diagnosis'd as having depression and you think it really is more like bipolar (which I tend to think is a spectrum in itself), you could log down any change in mood, temperment, sleep patterns, behavior, abilities- (such as can he fly through homework some days but struggle and become anxious or frustrated other days), characteristics, such as some days withdrawn but some days excessively talking, etc., and take these to the psychiatrist. [/QUOTE]
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