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PARENTGUIDE
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Health and Fitness

Help is on the Way
How you can support someone with bipolar disorder.
by Wes Burgess, M.D., Ph.D.


TWEENS & TEENS News December 2007

Mary is in my office, crying. Tomorrow is her first day in a new school, and she is afraid that the other students will not understand her. She is afraid that the other students will not want to be her friend. Mary has bipolar disorder.

Through the Internet, the media or your personal experience, you have probably known of adults who have an illness called bipolar disorder. However, you may not realize that more than 30 percent of the time, bipolar disorder starts between the ages of 10 and 18. A study by the Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation estimated that 750,000 tweens and teens suffer from bipolar disorder— and I believe the number is much higher. You are highly likely to meet someone your age who has bipolar disorder, and you may have the unique opportunity to be that person’s friend.

Having a friend who is bipolar can be a special and rewarding experience for both you and your friend. You will be able to see firsthand how an adolescent meets the challenges of living with a serious medical condition. At the same time, your bipolar friend will expose you to new thoughts, viewpoints and new approaches to life borne out of his or her experience with the bipolar condition. You will have the opportunity to help another person, and your bipolar friend will benefit from your support. If you have a friend with bipolar disorder, now or in the future, it’s a good idea to find out what the condition is all about and how specifically you can help.

What is Bipolar Disorder?
Bipolar disorder, or manic depression, as it used to be called, is a physical illness that affects the body, brain and emotions. Left unchecked, bipolar disorder can interfere with normal teenage life and keep tweens and teens from achieving their dreams. Untreated bipolar disorder can cause agitation, impulsivity, irritability, mood swings, obsessive thinking, poor attention, procrastination, sleep problems and weight problems.

Bipolar adolescents usually have a mixture of slowed-down (depressed) and sped-up (manic) symptoms. Depressed symptoms include difficulty waking in the morning, fatigue, easily hurt feelings, low motivation, social avoidance and weight gain. Manic symptoms include distractibility, hyperactivity, insomnia, inability to maintain weight, poor judgment, an overly optimistic mood and an inflated self-image.

To find out if someone has bipolar disorder, the person in question needs to see a doctor for an evaluation. Psychiatrists are medical doctors trained in the physical, mental and emotional aspects of bipolar disorder, including how to treat it. If a doctor makes a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, he or she will probably prescribe a mood stabilizer, which is a medication tailored to treat bipolar disorder. After the disorder has been brought under control with a mood stabilizer medication, the tween or teen will feel more like his or herself, and will be better able to face the challenges of the bipolar illness.

Situations Challenging Bipolar Tweens and Teens, and How You Can Help
Schoolwork is often challenging for adolescents with bipolar disorder. Even though bipolar students may be intelligent and creative, bipolar distractibility makes it hard for them to sit through classes and take notes. Bipolar disorder can make it especially difficult to succeed in classes that rely heavily on linear thinking, such as algebra, precalculus, foreign languages and composition. At home, it may be difficult for bipolar students to start homework assignments or to study for tests, and these responsibilities often get put off until the last minute.

You can help your bipolar friend by offering to do homework with that person or suggesting to study together for quizzes and tests. Your presence will help him or her to stay on task. In addition, you may find you get more of your own studying done while helping your friend than you would have if you had studied solo.

Mood swings, anger, sadness, shame and jealousy plague many tweens and teens who have bipolar disorder. They spend a lot of time suffering from negative emotions and they may release their frustration inappropriately— perhaps at you. Try to be understanding if your bipolar friend unintentionally says or does things that make you uncomfortable, such as teasing, criticizing and telling secrets. As anger outbursts often disappear within hours or a day, be prepared to wait. If your friend is sad, encourage him or her to pursue happy and rewarding activities. This helps chase away the blues.

Bipolar disorder can make individuals sensitive to certain medications and drugs. Drugstore cough medicines, cold remedies and prescription pain medicines can worsen bipolar symptoms. Antidepressants are not designed for bipolar depression, and they can irreversibly worsen the course of bipolar disorder. Recent cases where adolescents have become violent after being given antidepressants may represent a bipolar drug reaction. This drug sensitivity makes it imperative that bipolar tweens and teens avoid alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, speed and other illicit drugs. Encourage your friend to understand that using these drugs can worsen bipolar disorder and leave lives in shambles.

You may be surprised if your friend’s bipolar disorder increases his or her sex drive. Your bipolar friend may be just as surprised, especially if the person is not ready or does not want these feelings. Bipolar disorder can cause your friend to think obsessively about sex or get into dangerous sexual situations. Severe consequences related to impulsivity and poor judgment in sexual matters may include sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancies. In these situations, your consistent and levelheaded advice may help save your bipolar friend from making mistakes he or she will regret for years.

The worst problem you may face is learning that your friend is so depressed or angry that he or she is thinking of committing suicide. If your friend does not seek help or you are worried about your friend’s safety, then this situation has already gone beyond your control. You are not a doctor or a therapist, and you cannot take responsibility for your friend’s life. Instead, you must discuss your friend’s possibility of attempting suicide with your parents and ask them to handle the situation. They will probably call your friend’s parents to help ensure your friend gets help.

Take Advantage of Available Bipolar Information and Support
Take this opportunity to learn more about bipolar disorder. There are some great books available for you to read. The Internet offers a wealth of informative sites, support groups, chats and blogs for bipolar sufferers and their friends. You and your bipolar friend are not alone.

•American Psychiatric Association, www.psych.org
•APA Patient Alliance, www.apaalliance.org
•Bipolar World: A Bipolar Family, www.bipolarworld.net
•Dr. Wes Burgess’s Web site, www.wesburgess.yourmd.com
•Cbel.com Mental Health Index, www.cbel.com/mood_disorders
•Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation, www.bpkids.org
•Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance, www.dbsalliance.org
•Harbor of Refuge, Inc., www.harbor-of-refuge.org
•A Silver Lining, www.a-silver-lining.org
•Support 4 Hope, www.support4hope.com/bipolar_disorder/index.htm

Set an Example
The single best way you can help your bipolar friend is by setting a good example. Eat healthy food, exercise, and avoid alcohol and drugs. Do your schoolwork. Get out of the house and find things to do that are new, exciting and fun. Show your friend how to maintain a good social support system, how to make new friends and how to be a good friend. When your bipolar friend sees that you have a healthy, happy life, he or she will want to follow your example.

Wes Burgess, M.D., Ph.D., is a clinical psychiatrist specializing in the treatment of bipolar disorder in adolescents and adults. His private practice is in Los Angeles, and his first book, The Bipolar Handbook (Avery/Penguin), is available in bookstores and over the Internet. His next book from Avery, a member of Penguin Publishing Group (USA) Inc., addresses bipolar disorder in kids and teens.

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