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  #1  
Old Dec 16, 2021, 01:03 AM
Pollyputthekettleon Pollyputthekettleon is offline
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So, your therapist formally diagnosed you with Narcissistic Personality Disorder and claims you couldn't contain the diagnosis so withheld it. Then you make a complaint about other things he did then the diagnosis is flung in your face like a pile of dung.

How do you respond? This is part of a long complaint.

Does therapeutic privilege still exist? I have had a full assessment since and the public health system agree it's a misdiagnosis. (His diagnosis deviated from best practice) but he won't back down. All other clinicians who have diagnosed me are just wrong. Oh boy...

Last edited by CANDC; Dec 16, 2021 at 09:51 AM. Reason: clarification by OP withheld
Thanks for this!
mote.of.soul

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  #2  
Old Dec 16, 2021, 04:34 AM
Pollyputthekettleon Pollyputthekettleon is offline
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Sorry that was meant to *withheld it
  #3  
Old Dec 16, 2021, 07:07 AM
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Favorite Jeans Favorite Jeans is offline
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Does it matter? If you no longer see the therapist and you have another one, who cares what one person thinks.

Like you’re complaining about him to an external body, right? So his misdiagnosis is part of the issue.

Last edited by Favorite Jeans; Dec 16, 2021 at 07:27 AM.
Thanks for this!
unaluna
  #4  
Old Dec 16, 2021, 08:08 AM
ChickenNoodleSoup ChickenNoodleSoup is offline
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My understanding is that therapeutic privilege only applies if through the disclosure there would be an imminent serious threat. Like if a client had said previously "I couldn't take it if I were diagnosed with BPD, I'd just kill myself if that happened" and the therapist does indeed believe that this person has BPD, then the assumption could be made that this threat was meant seriously and also that due to the nature of BPD the risk even further increases, thus the diagnosis is not disclosed.

The refusal to go back to therapy if somebody is not happy with the diagnosis or similar things is not ground for therapeutic privilege.

To me, it would depend on how this is affecting your life. As Favorite Jeans said, are you doing a formal complaint to an external body? If so, I don't have much experience with this, but I'd assume you would put this point down as one of the complaints and hope they agree with you.
Otherwise, is the information saved anywhere, like if you go to the ER, will the diagnosis be there for them to see right away, something like that? This would affect your life significantly and in that case I'd probably try to find out how you can get that deleted, I'm sure there is a way, mistakes happen and if you have proof from other therapists saying it's wrong, that should help.

If it's neither of these two situations, I'd not contact that therapist again and try to move on, maybe with the help of another therapist.
Thanks for this!
Pollyputthekettleon
  #5  
Old Dec 16, 2021, 12:15 PM
Pollyputthekettleon Pollyputthekettleon is offline
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I have had the diagnosis removed from my file.

The diagnosis was used by one advisor in the complaint to discredit was narrative what he did. E.g I just misinterpreted everything due to the diagnosis. Thankfully my new therapist (who actually made the complaint in the first place challenged the diagnosis and helped get me an expert opinion sho ruled out NPD)
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