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“I’ve discovered the COVID-19 vaccine”. Approach of a bipolar disorder clinical case in the Mental Health Day Hospital of Salamanca during the pandemic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 September 2022

A. Gonzalez-Mota*
Affiliation:
Institute of Biomedicine of Salamanca (IBSAL), Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
C. Fombellida Velasco
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
A. Gonzalez Gil
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
P. Gómez Hernández
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
I. Vicente Torres
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
M. Covacho Gonzalez
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
C. Payo-Rodriguez
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
E. Beltran-Mercado
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain
C. Roncero
Affiliation:
University of Salamanca Healthcare Complex, Psychiatry, Salamanca, Spain University of Salamanca, Psychiatry, SALAMANCA, Spain
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

A 21-year-old woman diagnosed with bipolar disorder was hospitalized in the Mental Health Day Hospital of Salamanca during the Covid pandemic. The patient engaged with 4 different jobs and a master’s degree, beginning with verbose speech, dysphoria, global insomnia, grandiose delusions, extremely high energy and thinking she has the vaccine. She works the following objectives:illness insight, risk factors, psychopathological stabilization, social skills, slowing down of activities and taking responsibilities.

Objectives

The objective is do a follow-up of the patient during her hospitalization in the Mental Health Day Hospital and to carry out a structured search in PubMed and Up-to-Date about psychotherapy and bipolar disorder.

Methods

3-month follow-up of a 21-year-old woman diagnosed with bipolar disorder during her hospitalization in the Mental Health Day Hospital in Salamanca and a structured search in PubMed and Up-to-Date in April 2021 in English, French and Spanish, including the last 10 years with the keywords “psychotherapy”, “psychotherapies” and “bipolar disorder “.77 studies were analyzed: 12 included, 65 excluded.

Results

Several randomized trials highlight the efficacy of group psychoeducation and cognitive-behavioural therapy in relapse prevention, improving illness insight, medical adherence and less hospitalizations. Therapeutic alliance plays a significant role in the process. Our patient improved her knowledge of her illness and treatment, her social skills and reconnected with her relatives and slowed down her activity. She then was referred to her community mental heath center psychiatrist.

Conclusions

The insight in bipolar disorder plays an important role in medical adherence and prevention of relapses. Therapeutic alliance improves their insight, their functionality in their daily life and enables close monitoring. Medical treatment should be accompanied by psychotherapy for a complete approach of the treatment.

Disclosure

No significant relationships.

Type
Abstract
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the European Psychiatric Association
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