^I would argue that this is how you get a misdiagnosis rather than a proper one. A proper diagnosis should, ideally, take time. By that, I mean that I believe that psychiatrists shouldn't be allowed to diagnose their patients until they have at least spent an extended period of time with them (maybe around 8-10 sessions minimum). Along with that, they should have to go over each question on whichever assessment they are administering very carefully to ensure that patients fully understand what the questions are referring to and are able to answer accurately.
Oh my god, thank you. Finally someone else that shares this sentiment.
Wards are a place meant for stabilization and maybe skills training. NOT diagnosis.
No ward I've ever been in has had any MH professional spend nearly enough time to get an accurate read on dare I say anyone. Seeing someone for at tops a few minutes is not conducive to actually understanding the problem.
However, if someone is a long term patient, they (MH professionals)
might start hitting that point where they begin to have a much better idea. Just by virtue of frequency of meetings and duration of observation.
Misdiagnoses are far more harmful to an individual than not getting a diagnosis at all, in my opinion.
Not only does it direct treatment a certain way (i.e. being drugged with stuff that treats one illness effectively but not helpful at all for another or using x method of therapy where y might be more conducive to recovery) it also leads both the professional, and sometimes the sufferer themselves to look at things from a specific angle and miss important additional details... Which is totally dangerous because of illnesses that may present themselves similarly, or missing potential co-morbidity.
If you want a diagnosis, best bet is to find a professional that you click with and work with them for a while. If you can, shop around until you find someone you can tolerate, and that doesn't treat you as a paycheck, but as a person that matters.
Getting on the right track from the beginning will save you from a lifetime of potentially increased suffering.