The term “holistic” deals with every aspect of a particular whole. Thus, holistic psychiatry is mental healthcare that seeks to cover all the aspects of mental health. Holistic or “whole-person” care has long been a goal of psychiatry as a profession. Unfortunately, achieving this goal is often easier said than done.
There have been approaches to holistic psychiatry in conventional medicine, but these approaches have not really considered the whole person. For psychiatry to achieve this goal of holistic treatment, it needs to go beyond typical therapy but not deny the scientific truths we have already uncovered. Holistic treatment is a combination of conventional, nutritional, and functional medicine, along with a healthy dose of mind-body medicine thrown in.
A Brief Overview of Holistic Psychiatry
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Holistic psychiatry aims to find the root cause of problems and help patients by dealing with that root cause. A patient’s labs are drawn and examined, and a psychiatrist then looks at the environmental factors that could play a part in the person’s issues. Lifestyle examination continues, and thought patterns are dissected in search of the patient’s symptoms and the underlying problems that lead to them. Because it’s a system that focuses on the individual, no generic cure can be used here. Instead, patients require individualized attention for their problems since each person is unique. Medications may also play a part in helping a patient recover alongside other holistic means.
At its heart, holistic psychiatry is an additive therapy. It doesn’t stand on its own, nor does it pretend to do things that it cannot. Instead, it provides patients with a way to overcome their condition entirely over the long term and give them back their love for life.
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What Are the Goals Of A Holistic Psychiatrist?
In a nutshell, a holistic psychiatrist aims to ensure that their patient has optimal wellness. Okay, so what is optimal wellness? Many approaches to mental health only seek to fix a specific problem. Unfortunately, because of how complex the human mind is, fixing a single problem usually doesn’t help the individual actually become well. Many times, a particular problem is simply the manifestation of a larger problem – one whose sources and causes are not immediately apparent. When that single illness is fixed, is the patient well? If one defines well as the absence of sickness, then yes, the patient is well. However, holistic psychiatry sees wellness and wholeness as the same thing. A patient isn’t well until they are whole, which requires more than just stopgap measures to fix individual problems.
Holistic psychiatry doesn’t just seek to fix a person’s mental illness. It aims to give them a well-balanced mental state. In a well-balanced mental state, a patient is fulfilled and happy. They look forward to new experiences and grasp every day to its fullest. Like other forms of preventative medicine, holistic psychiatry recognizes that prevention is better than a cure. Thus to prevent negative mindsets from setting in, they teach therapeutic methods that give patients the tools to maintain a healthy, positive attitude. Through holistic psychiatry, a person doesn’t just overcome their mental illness and re-enter society. They find a purpose and a goal to fulfill. This approach is far more likely to result in a person’s outlook on life-changing.