Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2021
Patient evaluation on intake
• 57-year-old man with a chief complaint of “horrible depression”
• Feels he “made a bad decision” late in his career and is now unemployed after many successful years in equipment sales
• Fearful and nervous that, at his age, he is too young to retire and too old to find a new job and be successful again Psychiatric history
• He had been without major mental health issues until he left his gainful employment of 25 years as an equipment salesman
– He left during poor corporate economic times assuming his company would fold
– He left for a second company for a sales position in a different market, and performed poorly on commission and was let go
– Psychiatric symptoms developed after this
• Has not been able to go back to work at all due to anxiety and fear about failing again
• He admits to full syndromal depressive symptoms
– He has passive suicidal thoughts and ideational guilt that he is a bad spouse in that he has let his family down by being unsuccessful and unemployed
– Additionally, he is amotivated, fatigued, and states he is hopeless and pessimistic about the future
• He now worries about everything, all the time, cannot focus, and is tense. He states he was never like this before
• Additionally, he can barely “look people in the eye” and talk to them
– He is very concerned about doing and saying the right thing
– After years of remembering many details in sales, he can barely keep any facts straight, and is convinced that he will fail
– Panic attacks have occurred at recent job interviews, and since then is avoiding most situations where he has to speak to superiors
• He has relatively few friends as most were colleagues at his previous job
• While he is at home more, he is experiencing more conflict with his wife, although states she is supportive
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