Skip to content
Psychological services in Sussex, Kent, London and beyond
twitter
linkedin
Christine Tizzard Psychology Logo
Call Support 01243 775055
Email Support info@ctpsy.co.uk
  • Home
  • Expert Witness
    • Expert Witness
    • Sussex Expert Assessment Pilot
    • Criminal Law
    • Parenting Assessments
    • Personal Injury
  • Local Authorities
    • Pre-Proceedings Work and Edge of Care Cases
    • Work with Struggling Families (Families in Crisis)
    • Adoption and Fostering
    • Team Supervision
    • Training and Support
  • Treatment
    • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
    • Dialectical Behavioural Therapy
    • Family Therapy
    • Adult & Child Psychotherapy
    • Solution-Focused Therapy
    • Eye Movement Desensitisation Reprocessing
  • Training Courses
    • Psychology Therapy Groups
    • Courses – Workshops
    • Courses for Foster Parents – Adoptive Parents
    • Courses for Professionals Working with Children
  • Clinical Supervision
  • The Team
    • Vacancies
  • Contact Us
  • Media Enquiries
  • Privacy

Rare Disease and Not Being Heard by Your GP

Home > chronic illness management > Rare Disease and Not Being Heard by Your GP

Rare Disease and Not Being Heard by Your GP

Posted on July 26, 2017October 16, 2017 by Chrissie Tizzard
0
Facing ignorant GP described using Ignorance sign on white wall
Are you struggling to explain your illness to your GP?

Living with a rare illness is a struggle, but dealing with an ignorant GP increases that struggle.

Those feelings of not being listened to increase the isolation, ramp up the stress and contribute to disease progression.

I do not use the term ‘ignorant’ as an insult, rather I chose it to reflect the true meaning of the word. Ignorant means ‘destitute of knowledge’: in this case, a GP who doesn’t know what it means to live with your rare illness day in, day out, and doesn’t know how debilitating its symptoms can be.

Rare Diseases and GP Treatment

A GP’s case load normally consists of the everyday ailments of living, plus a few rarer ones.  GPs are not trained to know about the rare diseases that patients present with, and this is where the problems can start.

Trying to inform your GP about your rare disease and the tests you currently need is often akin to tip-toeing through a volcanic minefield. Why is this? It’s rather simple. The majority of GPs have been conditioned to believe they know most things about our health. Repeated consultations with grateful patients reinforce this belief.

GP’s can occasionally become omnipotent. Faced with a patient who knows more than them about a certain condition (as we rarities must do in order to survive) can be threatening to their self-perception. They do not like to feel small, and may immediately and unconsciously deflect or project on to us.

When this happens, the patient comes away feeling a hypochondriac, or a time-waster. The patient shuffles away feeling awful and the normal power inequality is restored. What has just happened is rarely questioned, except perhaps in a therapist’s room.

How to Assert Yourself With Your GP

It can be very helpful to take a second when you feel talked down to and patronised. This is your moment to regroup and have another go. Remember these three simple steps – you could even write them down and read them before your consultation.

1. Hold your ground.

2. Repeat your requests slowly and clearly, in a non-defensive tone.

3. Remain measured and stay in adult mode.

Your GP will feel less threatened and reduce the superior tone. He or she will have no choice but to operate in ‘adult mode’ as well. This normally produces a win-win situation. You, I and our families lose when we walk away feeling stupid.

It is also critically important to research as much as you are able to, and make sure your information is correct, to help yourself. Fortunately, there are many great blogs available online, where people with a rare illness have described the same symptoms and GP frustrations as you. Try typing the name of your illness, plus the word ‘blog’, into a search engine: for example, ‘chronic fatigue syndrome + blog’.

Lastly, I recommend getting a book on assertion if it is hard for you to stay in control in difficult situations; alternatively, you can find some great internet resources on how to be more assertive in general.

Written by a guest blogger for Christine Tizzard Psychology (ctpsy.co.uk).

Tags: autoimmune, lupus, medical opinion, psychology, raredisease, sarcoidosis, sjogrens, ta, treatment

Search the Website

News

  • Clinically vulnerable children need to play, but not roulette. February 20, 2022
  • Long Covid: How Psychologists Can Help September 7, 2021
  • 16,000 pregnant women and new mothers without access to mental health support during the pandemic July 12, 2021
  • Managing children’s anxiety after Covid-19 lockdown May 31, 2021
  • Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviour Disorders: Skin Picking, Hair Pulling and More May 17, 2021
  • Online Workshop for Mental Health Professionals: Long Covid – Clinical Tools for Mental Health Staff April 10, 2021
  • Seven of the Best Books About Grief April 5, 2021
  • Online Workshop for Therapists: Working with PTSD in Post-Covid Patients March 25, 2021
  • Online Workshop for Health Professionals: Reducing PTSD in Frontline Staff During COVID-19 March 13, 2021
  • Dealing with Uncertainty in a Coronavirus World November 20, 2020

Psychology Blog

Copyright Christine Tizzard Psychology 2018. Company number: 9696891. Registered address: 71-75 Shelton Street, Covent Garden, WC2H 9JQ. | WordPress Theme: Enlighten