Psychiatric Interviews for Teaching: Mania
In this film, a psychiatrist assesses a man who has been referred by his GP. The patient demonstrates flight of ideas, pressure of speech, disinhibition, punning, grandiose delusions, and second person auditory hallucinations. His presentation is consistent with mania.
Please note that this video has been made by the University of Nottingham for teaching purposes. The psychiatrist is a real psychiatrist but the patient is played by an actor.
31 Comments
Helppp😂
Can someone give a list for the findings
Medical student here, thank you so much for such an informative video!
You shouldn't have said everything to her. Brilliant friend
Actually the best acting I’ve ever seen
I speak like this when i feel really energized and people ask me if ive swallowed a talking pill. Rapid speech thoughts going at a thousand miles an hour and people cant keep up. Im not diagnosed but i know this can also be associated with ADHD and anxiety etc.
An actor. AN ACTOR!? I was so convinced that this was a real patient interview, even knowing privacy laws would never allow it… just phenomenally well done.
There's always a mate called Dave 😊
what a genius performance
Hands down the best actor showing Mania symptoms i've ever seen
This dude went somewhere else and left us all behind.
Can somebody tell me what this video is supposed to be teaching? Is it to get a diagnosis?
What's the point of having the manic patient being "played" by an actor who isn't even bipolar?? Better to get an actual patient who is willing to share their manic episode for education.
This is excellent.
Wow great Video thanks!!!!
Wow, amazing presentation in the real world.
What is gp?
Best example of pressured speech on YouTube
John cooked doc at 4:54 😂😂😂
Behavior of the actor is spot on for general mania.
this was very good. constant talking very hard to have a conversation with,, it is absolutely exhausting
my husband is currently sectioned 2 for mania. a lot of what he is like is like this, and worse. i am surprise he is not blowing kisses at her. he is a clever man and has gone absolutely weird/bonkers. He also visits hospitals just to be around clever people and keeps talking to every single stranger and bothers doctors on their lunchbreak. it is a horrible illness. i hope the drugs will help him.
They both feels like manic
Neighbours might see this man leaving his house every day and be aware he is on benefits and think,'Look at him! He's not disabled, he seems friendly enough, why isn't he working?'. Inless you speak to these people for any lemgth of time you don't necessarily realise there is something seriously wrong. There's been a series of IPS/ work to welfare schemes over the years and having had to work alongside some of the mental health placements, I cannot tell you how much this go wrong. For the job at hand, for the peoplenwho have to try and work with them and for the person themselves. You see the twist in tone at the end… it alwys comes. It cam create havoc and be very costly to a company.
What SSRI did he get this from?
This is
MASSIVE Acting…
Dr has patience of a saint
Does this 'doctor' have any empathy at all ? Perhaps she should try dentistry as psychiatry doesn't seem to suit her.
Me as a boy trying to talk sense to my manic Mother 💯
Madam, In a . medical student level how can approach effectively and how can we satisfied, ok I did something and I will handle better in next like, waiting for you reply.
Call it Mania, but ne is right about the connections with numbers and stuff. That is literally how the Universe works among other things…