| Literature DB >> 27103817 |
Pamela Reed Gibson1, Sharon D Lockaby1, Jenna Michele Bryant1.
Abstract
In this paper, we summarize the results of an online survey of persons in the United States with chemical intolerance/multiple chemical sensitivity who sought help from mental health providers, including counselors, psychologists, psychiatrists, and others. Respondents reported on their most recent contact with a provider, describing reasons for the contact, accommodations requested and received, and suggestions for how the experience could be more helpful. Overall, though clients were accommodated in small ways, some received no accommodation, and many felt that the providers needed to be more knowledgeable regarding chemical intolerance. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of providers becoming more aware of multiple chemical sensitivity and more willing to make their services accessible to these clients.Entities:
Keywords: chemical intolerance; chemical sensitivity; contested illness; emerging disability; multiple chemical sensitivity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27103817 PMCID: PMC4827900 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S100688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Services sought from mental health providers by 60 persons with MCS
| Services | n |
|---|---|
| Counseling/help with coping | 21 |
| Disability evaluation | 13 |
| Help with depression | 7 |
| Medication review | 5 |
| Validation that condition is physical | 2 |
| Workers compensation evaluation | 2 |
| Help understanding neurological symptoms | 2 |
| Evaluation (referred by the primary care provider) | 1 |
| Help sorting out chemical reactions from depression | 1 |
| Required evaluation for Center for Independent Living | 1 |
| Help dealing with loss | 1 |
| Help for problems with getting sick at work | 1 |
Abbreviation: MCS, multiple chemical sensitivity.
Accommodations made by mental health providers for 60 persons with MCS
| Accommodations | n |
|---|---|
| No fragrance | 9 |
| Seen in a different location (including outside or different room) | 9 |
| Chemical-free room | 5 |
| Allowed to avoid the waiting room | 4 |
| Allowed to wear a mask | 4 |
| Opened the window | 3 |
| Turned off fluorescent lights and/or electric equipment | 3 |
| No air freshener | 2 |
| Telephone therapy | 2 |
| Answered orally instead of writing | 1 |
| Warned of fresh paint | 1 |
| Allowed breaks to cope with fatigue | 1 |
| Special chair | 1 |
| Closed the door | 1 |
| No keyboard typing | 1 |
| Seen as first client of the day | 1 |
| Practitioner tried to have a room scent-free (but remnants lingered) | 1 |
Abbreviation: MCS, multiple chemical sensitivity.
How could mental health provision have been better according to 60 persons with MCS
| How could help have been better? | n |
|---|---|
| Provider should have been more educated | 10 |
| The experience was already positive | 7 |
| Provider could have “believed” me | 3 |
| Discussion of and help with lifestyle changes | 3 |
| Provider recognize MCS as a physical condition | 2 |
| Safer office | 2 |
| An in-home intervention to set up family support | 2 |
| Providers should not push antidepressants | 1 |
| Have an advocate at each hospital | 1 |
| Be able to avoid waiting rooms | 1 |
| Windows that open | 1 |
| No smoking | 1 |
| Do not make us fight for the accommodations | 1 |
| A scent-free environment | 1 |
| Having a closer provider | 1 |
| In-person counseling | 1 |
| Break up testing over several days | 1 |
| Not going at all | 1 |
| Referral to Medicare/Medicaid provider | 1 |
| Understanding/compassion | 1 |
| I could have been accepted for full disability | 1 |
| I should have found someone more qualified | 1 |
Abbreviation: MCS, multiple chemical sensitivity.
Worst aspect of seeing mental health providers for 60 persons with MCS
| Aspect | n |
|---|---|
| Getting a psychological label | 5 |
| Getting no accommodations | 4 |
| Provider not understanding MCS | 3 |
| Not being believed regarding symptoms | 3 |
| Exposures in the setting | 3 |
| Having to go through a stinky building to get there | 2 |
| Being given psychiatric medication | 2 |
| There was no worst aspect | 2 |
| Getting no help | 2 |
| Being humiliated/demeaned | 2 |
| Talking through a mask | 1 |
| Taking the MMPI | 1 |
| Getting sick | 1 |
| The exhaustion | 1 |
| Fragrance on chairs | 1 |
| Fragrance on employees | 1 |
| The cost | 1 |
| Lost disability benefits | 1 |
| Being on guard so as not to be perceived as psychiatric | 1 |
| No testing for toxic encephalopathy only for psychological disorders | 1 |
| Being seen as trying to get out of work | 1 |
| Admitting it is chronic/lifelong | 1 |
| Embarrassment of talking about a disorder that could be perceived as psychiatric | 1 |
| Admitting that it could be a brain defect “on record” | 1 |
| Having an aloof examiner document notes | 1 |
| Lack of support/advice/discussion | 1 |
| Feeling as if I were talking to a stump | 1 |
| Getting depressed and upset | 1 |
Abbreviations: MCS, multiple chemical sensitivity; MMPI, Minnesota Multiplasic Personality Inventory.