FLORIDA EMPLOYEE'S TESTIFYING IN A FEDERAL CASE-THIS IS FOR YOU!

O.K., this is what is being said in the rumor mill.........Florida is about to get a new Sales V.P.( many think it's the new guy), HR (Medusa) is getting moved out, and several employee's and patients are in the process of filing legitimate lawsuits. The employee issues are surrounding a "hostile work environment," and the patient issues are about improper lab diagnosis.

And the last of the rumors.....WC is coming back and will be the sr. V.P. Florida!

LabCorp gets sued by patients everyday, that's not a rumor it's a fact. But in all fairness even the Salvation Army and Boy Scouts are being sued. So that's not really news
Hostile work enviroment? everyone who has ever gotten fired from a company claims the same thing.
So where's the beef? show us the money, vague rumors don't cut it.
Personally I don't think have any information.
 






O.K., this is what is being said in the rumor mill.........Florida is about to get a new Sales V.P.( many think it's the new guy), HR (Medusa) is getting moved out, and several employee's and patients are in the process of filing legitimate lawsuits. The employee issues are surrounding a "hostile work environment," and the patient issues are about improper lab diagnosis.

And the last of the rumors.....WC is coming back and will be the sr. V.P. Florida!
 






I am a current employee who feels as if we work in a "hostile work environment." I actually have perfect eval's and perform. I am not an angry x employee. Many of us feel this way. We get no respect, are treated like dogs, and if we have issues, we are black balled.
 






O.K., this is what is being said in the rumor mill.........Florida is about to get a new Sales V.P.( many think it's the new guy), HR (Medusa) is getting moved out, and several employee's and patients are in the process of filing legitimate lawsuits. The employee issues are surrounding a "hostile work environment," and the patient issues are about improper lab diagnosis.

And the last of the rumors.....WC is coming back and will be the sr. V.P. Florida!

patient issues are about improper lab diagnosis?

I thought the lab provided the results and the patients doctor provided the diagnosis...

Go Away
 
























Typical that someone at labcorp attempts to down play patient care and point to others as being the problem. I have been a tech in the Tampa lab and seen what kind of patient care our clients get. It is so bad that I pay out of pocket to go to Quest even though our labwork is free at labcorp.

I have never seen labcorp take respons for their actions, EVER!
 






Typical that someone at labcorp attempts to down play patient care and point to others as being the problem. I have been a tech in the Tampa lab and seen what kind of patient care our clients get. It is so bad that I pay out of pocket to go to Quest even though our labwork is free at labcorp.

I have never seen labcorp take respons for their actions, EVER!


You need to get in the real world. Every company had problems and issues. If you hate the company so much why stick around? Sounds like no matter where you or any of the other cry babies on this thread go you would be bellyaching about something.

Want to know how bad things are at Quest? go read their boards. They are all wishing they could work for LabCorp.

For the record I am by no means a fan of LabCorp, I would love to see them fail. But the reality is, it just ain't going to happen so why waste the energy?

You are nothing but ants to them.
 






You need to get in the real world. Every company had problems and issues. If you hate the company so much why stick around? Sounds like no matter where you or any of the other cry babies on this thread go you would be bellyaching about something.

Want to know how bad things are at Quest? go read their boards. They are all wishing they could work for LabCorp.

For the record I am by no means a fan of LabCorp, I would love to see them fail. But the reality is, it just ain't going to happen so why waste the energy?

You are nothing but ants to them.

Well said. The primary poster on this thread (responsible for 550 of the posts) considers himself a victimized by LabCorp. No one is holding a gun to their head to stay.
 













Not if LCA is getting taxpayer money through Medicare and Medicaid. Sorry, we have rules to abide by and if LCA is engaging in questionable or illegal activities, I won't stand for it.

I will not stop until KS is brought down by her own doing or mine. Unlike my comrades in Sales, all I care about is KS. I come from the Tampa Lab and do not share the hatred for TF as I do for KS.

I'd like to respond to the comments about whether this post should stay up or not. Don't like the content? Move on. The beauty of the US and the internet, in general, is the fact that we live in a free society and can say almost anything we damn well please. I'm probably 90% more educated, competent, and wealthier than most individuals who post on this board.

This is PERSONAL. I hate KS and other LCA employees for reasons of a personal nature. Her betrayal of my trust and her lack of integrity - when she is certified by the same accrediting body as I am - is a problem for me.

Quest is just as bad. No argument there.

Ants? Think about how many people, in history, have been brought down by people they regarded as inferior? Et tu, brute? There's a lot more going on than you might know or care to know.

I will not have convicted criminals, degenerates, and charlatans running the administration in Tampa anymore.
 






Not if LCA is getting taxpayer money through Medicare and Medicaid. Sorry, we have rules to abide by and if LCA is engaging in questionable or illegal activities, I won't stand for it.

I will not stop until KS is brought down by her own doing or mine. Unlike my comrades in Sales, all I care about is KS. I come from the Tampa Lab and do not share the hatred for TF as I do for KS.

I'd like to respond to the comments about whether this post should stay up or not. Don't like the content? Move on. The beauty of the US and the internet, in general, is the fact that we live in a free society and can say almost anything we damn well please. I'm probably 90% more educated, competent, and wealthier than most individuals who post on this board.

This is PERSONAL. I hate KS and other LCA employees for reasons of a personal nature. Her betrayal of my trust and her lack of integrity - when she is certified by the same accrediting body as I am - is a problem for me.

Quest is just as bad. No argument there.

Ants? Think about how many people, in history, have been brought down by people they regarded as inferior? Et tu, brute? There's a lot more going on than you might know or care to know.

I will not have convicted criminals, degenerates, and charlatans running the administration in Tampa anymore.


Enough already with telling us how smart and rich you are, it's getting old.

Let's face the fact that your gripe is not about Labcorp and Medicare, it's about your obsessive hatred for one person.

If you are so smart you know a rational person does not post 500 times and if you are so very rich you can just walk away from the entire issue.
 






This last poster seems to think that there is one person posting. I hate to burst your bubble Mr. "attorney." There is an entire group following this thread. This thread won't go away until you and your lying fellow attorneys see to it that Florida Mgmt is CHANGED once and for all!

The ONLY reason you stay on this thread and like to use the excuse that people hold "hatred" instead of looking at it for the truth that it is.......has to do with the fact that keeping people like KS around keeps you and your legal team on the LCA payroll! The more inept the Mgmt, the more lawsuits and issues these people create for the company.
 






This last poster seems to think that there is one person posting. I hate to burst your bubble Mr. "attorney." There is an entire group following this thread. This thread won't go away until you and your lying fellow attorneys see to it that Florida Mgmt is CHANGED once and for all!

The ONLY reason you stay on this thread and like to use the excuse that people hold "hatred" instead of looking at it for the truth that it is.......has to do with the fact that keeping people like KS around keeps you and your legal team on the LCA payroll! The more inept the Mgmt, the more lawsuits and issues these people create for the company.

Hope this helps


Delusional disorder is characterized by the presence of recurrent, persistent non-bizarre delusions .
Delusions are irrational beliefs, held with a high level of conviction, that are highly resistant to change even when the delusional person is exposed to forms of proof that contradict the belief. Non-bizarre delusions are considered to be plausible; that is, there is a possibility that what the person believes to be true could actually occur a small proportion of the time. Conversely, bizarre delusions focus on matters that would be impossible in reality. For example, a non-bizarre delusion might be the belief that one's activities are constantly under observation by federal law enforcement or intelligence agencies, which actually does occur for a small number of people. By contrast, a man who believes LabCorp is a corrupt company and has incompetent Managers holds a belief that could never come to pass in reality. Also, for beliefs to be considered delusional, the content or themes of the beliefs must be uncommon in the person's culture or religion. Generally, in delusional disorder, these mistaken beliefs are organized into a consistent world-view that is logical other than being based on an improbable foundation.

In addition to giving evidence of a cluster of interrelated non-bizarre delusions, persons with delusional disorder experience hallucinations far less frequently than do individuals with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder .

Description
Unlike most other psychotic disorders, the person with delusional disorder typically does not appear obviously odd, strange or peculiar during periods of active illness. Yet the person might make unusual choices in day-to-day life because of the delusional beliefs. Expanding on the previous example, people who believe that LabCorp is corrupt may post their delusional beliefs on the internet. Most mental health professionals would concur that until the person with delusional disorder discusses the areas of life affected by the delusions, it would be difficult to distinguish the sufferer from members of the general public who are not psychiatrically disturbed. Another distinction of delusional disorder compared with other psychotic disorders is that hallucinations are either absent or occur infrequently.

The person with delusional disorder may or may not come to the attention of mental health providers. Typically, while delusional disorder sufferers may be distressed about the delusional "reality," they may not have the insight to see that anything is wrong with the way they are thinking or functioning. Regarding the earlier example, those suffering delusion might state that the only thing wrong or upsetting in their lives is that the government is spying, and if the surveillance would cease, so would the problems. Similarly, the people suffering the disorder attribute any obstacles or problems in functioning to the delusional reality, separating it from their internal control. Furthermore, whether unable to get a good job or maintain a romantic relationship, the difficulties would be blamed on "government interference" rather than on their own failures or omissions. Unless the form of the delusions causes illegal behavior, somehow affects an ability to work, or otherwise deal with daily activities, the delusional disorder sufferer may adapt well enough to navigate life without coming to clinical attention. When people with delusional disorder decide to seek mental health care, the motivation for getting treatment is usually to decrease the negative emotions of depression, fearfulness, rage, or constant worry caused by living under the cloud of delusional beliefs, not to change the unusual thoughts themselves.

Forms of delusional disorder
An important aspect of delusional disorder is the identification of the form of delusion from which a person suffers. The most common form of delusional disorder is the persecutory or paranoid subtype, in which the patients are certain that others are striving to harm them.

In the erotomanic form of delusional disorder, the primary delusional belief is that some important person is secretly in love with the sufferer. The erotomanic type is more common in women than men. Erotomanic delusions may prompt stalking the love object and even violence against the beloved or those viewed as potential romantic rivals.

The grandiose subtype of delusional disorder involves the conviction of one's importance and uniqueness, and takes a variety of forms: believing that one has a distinguished role, has some remarkable connections with important persons, or enjoys some extraordinary powers or abilities.

In the somatic subtype, there is excessive concern and irrational ideas about bodily functioning, which may include worries regarding infestation with parasites or insects, imagined physical deformity, or a conviction that one is emitting a foul stench when there is no problematic odor.

The form of disorder most associated with violent behavior, usually between romantic partners, is the jealous subtype of delusional disorder. Patients are firmly convinced of the infidelity of a spouse or partner, despite contrary evidence and based on minimal data (like a messy bedspread or more cigarettes than usual in an ashtray, for instance). Delusional jealousy sufferers may gather scraps of conjectured "evidence," and may try to constrict their partners' activities or confine them to home. Delusional disorder cases involving aggression and injury toward others have been most associated with this subtype.

Delusion and other disorders
Even though the main characteristic of delusional disorder is a noticeable system of delusional beliefs, delusions may occur in the course of a large number of other psychiatric disorders. Delusions are often observed in persons with other psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder. In addition to occurring in the psychotic disorders, delusions also may be evident as part of a response to physical, medical conditions (such as brain injury or brain tumors), or reactions to ingestion of a drug.

Delusions also occur in the dementias, which are syndromes wherein psychiatric symptoms and memory loss result from deterioration of brain tissue. Because delusions can be shown as part of many illnesses, the diagnosis of delusional disorder is partially conducted by process of elimination. If the delusions are not accompanied by persistent, recurring hallucinations, then schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder are not appropriate diagnoses. If the delusions are not accompanied by memory loss, then dementia is ruled out. If there is no physical illness or injury or other active biological cause (such as drug ingestion or drug withdrawal), then the delusions cannot be attributed to a general medical problem or drug-related causes. If delusions are the most obvious and pervasive symptom, without hallucinations, medical causation, drug influences or memory loss, then delusional disorder is the most appropriate categorization.

Because delusions occur in many different disorders, some clinician-researchers have argued that there is little usefulness in focusing on what diagnosis the person has been given. Those who ascribe to this view believe it is more important to focus on the symptom of delusional thinking, and find ways to have an effect on delusions, whether they occur in delusional disorder or schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. The majority of psychotherapy techniques used in delusional disorder come from symptom-focused (as opposed to diagnosis-focused) researcher-practitioners.

Causes and symptoms
Causes
Because clear identification of delusional disorder has traditionally been challenging, scientists have conducted far less research relating to the disorder than studies for schizophrenia or mood disorders. Still, some theories of causation have developed, which fall into several categories.

GENETIC OR BIOLOGICAL. Close relatives of persons with delusional disorder have increased rates of delusional disorder and paranoid personality traits. They do not have higher rates of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder or mood disorder compared to relatives of non-delusional persons. Increased incidence of these psychiatric disorders in individuals closely genetically related to persons with delusional disorder suggest that there is a genetic component to the disorder. Furthermore, a number of studies comparing activity of different regions of the brain in delusional and non-delusional research participants yielded data about differences in the functioning of the brains between members of the two groups. These differences in brain activity suggest that persons neurologically with delusions tend to react as if threatening conditions are consistently present. Non-delusional persons only show such patterns under certain kinds of conditions where the interpretation of being threatened is more accurate. With both brain activity evidence and family heritability evidence, a strong chance exists that there is a biological aspect to delusional disorder.

DYSFUNCTIONAL COGNITIVE PROCESSING. An elaborate term for thinking is "cognitive processing." Delusions may arise from distorted ways people have of explaining life to themselves. The most prominent cognitive problems involve the manner in which delusion sufferers develop conclusions both about other people, and about causation of unusual perceptions or negative events. Studies examining how people with delusions develop theories about reality show that the subjects have ideas which which they tend to reach an inference based on less information than most people use. This "jumping to conclusions" bias can lead to delusional interpretations of ordinary events. For example, developing flu-like symptoms coinciding with the week new neighbors move in might lead to the conclusion, "the new neighbors are poisoning me." The conclusion is drawn without considering alternative explanations—catching an illness from a relative with the flu, that a virus seems to be going around at work, or that the tuna salad from lunch at the deli may have been spoiled. Additional research shows that persons prone to delusions "read" people differently than non-delusional individuals do. Whether they do so more accurately or particularly poorly is a matter of controversy. Delusional persons develop interpretations about how others view them that are distorted. They tend to view life as a continuing series of threatening events. When these two aspects of thought co-occur, a tendency to develop delusions about others wishing to do them harm is likely.

MOTIVATED OR DEFENSIVE DELUSIONS. Some predisposed persons might suffer the onset of an ongoing delusional disorder when coping with life and maintaining high self-esteem becomes a significant challenge. In order to preserve a positive view of oneself, a person views others as the cause of personal difficulties that may occur. This can then become an ingrained pattern of thought.

Symptoms
The criteria that define delusional disorder are furnished in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition Text Revision, or DSM-IV-TR , published by the American Psychiatric Association. The criteria for delusional disorder are as follows:

non-bizarre delusions which have been present for at least one month
absence of obviously odd or bizarre behavior
absence of hallucinations, or hallucinations that only occur infrequently in comparison to other psychotic disorders
no memory loss, medical illness or drug or alcohol-related effects are associated with the development of delusions
Demographics
The base rate of delusional disorder in adults is unclear. The prevalence is estimated at 0.025-0.03%, lower than the rates for schizophrenia (1%). Delusional disorder may account for 1–2% of admissions to inpatient psychiatric hospitals. Age at onset ranges from 18–90 years, with a mean age of 40 years. More females than males (overall) suffer from delusional disorder, especially the late onset form that is observed in the elderly.

Diagnosis
Client interviews focused on obtaining information about the sufferer's life situation and past history aid in identification of delusional disorder. With the client's permission, the clinician obtains details from earlier medical records, and engages in thorough discussion with the client's immediate family—helpful measures in determining whether delusions are present. The clinician may use a semi-structured interview called a mental status examination to assess the patient's concentration, memory, understanding the individual's situation and logical thinking. The mental status examination is intended to reveal peculiar thought processes in the patient. The Peters Delusion Inventory (PDI) is a psychological test that focuses on identifying and understanding delusional thinking; but its use is more common in research than in clinical practice.
 






Hope this helps


Delusional disorder is characterized by the presence of recurrent, persistent non-bizarre delusions .
Delusions are irrational beliefs, held with a high level of conviction, that are highly resistant to change even when the delusional person is exposed to forms of proof that contradict the belief. Non-bizarre delusions are considered to be plausible; that is, there is a possibility that what the person believes to be true could actually occur a small proportion of the time. Conversely, bizarre delusions focus on matters that would be impossible in reality. For example, a non-bizarre delusion might be the belief that one's activities are constantly under observation by federal law enforcement or intelligence agencies, which actually does occur for a small number of people. By contrast, a man who believes LabCorp is a corrupt company and has incompetent Managers holds a belief that could never come to pass in reality. Also, for beliefs to be considered delusional, the content or themes of the beliefs must be uncommon in the person's culture or religion. Generally, in delusional disorder, these mistaken beliefs are organized into a consistent world-view that is logical other than being based on an improbable foundation.

In addition to giving evidence of a cluster of interrelated non-bizarre delusions, persons with delusional disorder experience hallucinations far less frequently than do individuals with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder .

Description
Unlike most other psychotic disorders, the person with delusional disorder typically does not appear obviously odd, strange or peculiar during periods of active illness. Yet the person might make unusual choices in day-to-day life because of the delusional beliefs. Expanding on the previous example, people who believe that LabCorp is corrupt may post their delusional beliefs on the internet. Most mental health professionals would concur that until the person with delusional disorder discusses the areas of life affected by the delusions, it would be difficult to distinguish the sufferer from members of the general public who are not psychiatrically disturbed. Another distinction of delusional disorder compared with other psychotic disorders is that hallucinations are either absent or occur infrequently.

The person with delusional disorder may or may not come to the attention of mental health providers. Typically, while delusional disorder sufferers may be distressed about the delusional "reality," they may not have the insight to see that anything is wrong with the way they are thinking or functioning. Regarding the earlier example, those suffering delusion might state that the only thing wrong or upsetting in their lives is that the government is spying, and if the surveillance would cease, so would the problems. Similarly, the people suffering the disorder attribute any obstacles or problems in functioning to the delusional reality, separating it from their internal control. Furthermore, whether unable to get a good job or maintain a romantic relationship, the difficulties would be blamed on "government interference" rather than on their own failures or omissions. Unless the form of the delusions causes illegal behavior, somehow affects an ability to work, or otherwise deal with daily activities, the delusional disorder sufferer may adapt well enough to navigate life without coming to clinical attention. When people with delusional disorder decide to seek mental health care, the motivation for getting treatment is usually to decrease the negative emotions of depression, fearfulness, rage, or constant worry caused by living under the cloud of delusional beliefs, not to change the unusual thoughts themselves.

Forms of delusional disorder
An important aspect of delusional disorder is the identification of the form of delusion from which a person suffers. The most common form of delusional disorder is the persecutory or paranoid subtype, in which the patients are certain that others are striving to harm them.

In the erotomanic form of delusional disorder, the primary delusional belief is that some important person is secretly in love with the sufferer. The erotomanic type is more common in women than men. Erotomanic delusions may prompt stalking the love object and even violence against the beloved or those viewed as potential romantic rivals.

The grandiose subtype of delusional disorder involves the conviction of one's importance and uniqueness, and takes a variety of forms: believing that one has a distinguished role, has some remarkable connections with important persons, or enjoys some extraordinary powers or abilities.

In the somatic subtype, there is excessive concern and irrational ideas about bodily functioning, which may include worries regarding infestation with parasites or insects, imagined physical deformity, or a conviction that one is emitting a foul stench when there is no problematic odor.

The form of disorder most associated with violent behavior, usually between romantic partners, is the jealous subtype of delusional disorder. Patients are firmly convinced of the infidelity of a spouse or partner, despite contrary evidence and based on minimal data (like a messy bedspread or more cigarettes than usual in an ashtray, for instance). Delusional jealousy sufferers may gather scraps of conjectured "evidence," and may try to constrict their partners' activities or confine them to home. Delusional disorder cases involving aggression and injury toward others have been most associated with this subtype.

Delusion and other disorders
Even though the main characteristic of delusional disorder is a noticeable system of delusional beliefs, delusions may occur in the course of a large number of other psychiatric disorders. Delusions are often observed in persons with other psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder. In addition to occurring in the psychotic disorders, delusions also may be evident as part of a response to physical, medical conditions (such as brain injury or brain tumors), or reactions to ingestion of a drug.

Delusions also occur in the dementias, which are syndromes wherein psychiatric symptoms and memory loss result from deterioration of brain tissue. Because delusions can be shown as part of many illnesses, the diagnosis of delusional disorder is partially conducted by process of elimination. If the delusions are not accompanied by persistent, recurring hallucinations, then schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder are not appropriate diagnoses. If the delusions are not accompanied by memory loss, then dementia is ruled out. If there is no physical illness or injury or other active biological cause (such as drug ingestion or drug withdrawal), then the delusions cannot be attributed to a general medical problem or drug-related causes. If delusions are the most obvious and pervasive symptom, without hallucinations, medical causation, drug influences or memory loss, then delusional disorder is the most appropriate categorization.

Because delusions occur in many different disorders, some clinician-researchers have argued that there is little usefulness in focusing on what diagnosis the person has been given. Those who ascribe to this view believe it is more important to focus on the symptom of delusional thinking, and find ways to have an effect on delusions, whether they occur in delusional disorder or schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. The majority of psychotherapy techniques used in delusional disorder come from symptom-focused (as opposed to diagnosis-focused) researcher-practitioners.

Causes and symptoms
Causes
Because clear identification of delusional disorder has traditionally been challenging, scientists have conducted far less research relating to the disorder than studies for schizophrenia or mood disorders. Still, some theories of causation have developed, which fall into several categories.

GENETIC OR BIOLOGICAL. Close relatives of persons with delusional disorder have increased rates of delusional disorder and paranoid personality traits. They do not have higher rates of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder or mood disorder compared to relatives of non-delusional persons. Increased incidence of these psychiatric disorders in individuals closely genetically related to persons with delusional disorder suggest that there is a genetic component to the disorder. Furthermore, a number of studies comparing activity of different regions of the brain in delusional and non-delusional research participants yielded data about differences in the functioning of the brains between members of the two groups. These differences in brain activity suggest that persons neurologically with delusions tend to react as if threatening conditions are consistently present. Non-delusional persons only show such patterns under certain kinds of conditions where the interpretation of being threatened is more accurate. With both brain activity evidence and family heritability evidence, a strong chance exists that there is a biological aspect to delusional disorder.

DYSFUNCTIONAL COGNITIVE PROCESSING. An elaborate term for thinking is "cognitive processing." Delusions may arise from distorted ways people have of explaining life to themselves. The most prominent cognitive problems involve the manner in which delusion sufferers develop conclusions both about other people, and about causation of unusual perceptions or negative events. Studies examining how people with delusions develop theories about reality show that the subjects have ideas which which they tend to reach an inference based on less information than most people use. This "jumping to conclusions" bias can lead to delusional interpretations of ordinary events. For example, developing flu-like symptoms coinciding with the week new neighbors move in might lead to the conclusion, "the new neighbors are poisoning me." The conclusion is drawn without considering alternative explanations—catching an illness from a relative with the flu, that a virus seems to be going around at work, or that the tuna salad from lunch at the deli may have been spoiled. Additional research shows that persons prone to delusions "read" people differently than non-delusional individuals do. Whether they do so more accurately or particularly poorly is a matter of controversy. Delusional persons develop interpretations about how others view them that are distorted. They tend to view life as a continuing series of threatening events. When these two aspects of thought co-occur, a tendency to develop delusions about others wishing to do them harm is likely.

MOTIVATED OR DEFENSIVE DELUSIONS. Some predisposed persons might suffer the onset of an ongoing delusional disorder when coping with life and maintaining high self-esteem becomes a significant challenge. In order to preserve a positive view of oneself, a person views others as the cause of personal difficulties that may occur. This can then become an ingrained pattern of thought.

Symptoms
The criteria that define delusional disorder are furnished in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition Text Revision, or DSM-IV-TR , published by the American Psychiatric Association. The criteria for delusional disorder are as follows:

non-bizarre delusions which have been present for at least one month
absence of obviously odd or bizarre behavior
absence of hallucinations, or hallucinations that only occur infrequently in comparison to other psychotic disorders
no memory loss, medical illness or drug or alcohol-related effects are associated with the development of delusions
Demographics
The base rate of delusional disorder in adults is unclear. The prevalence is estimated at 0.025-0.03%, lower than the rates for schizophrenia (1%). Delusional disorder may account for 1–2% of admissions to inpatient psychiatric hospitals. Age at onset ranges from 18–90 years, with a mean age of 40 years. More females than males (overall) suffer from delusional disorder, especially the late onset form that is observed in the elderly.

Diagnosis
Client interviews focused on obtaining information about the sufferer's life situation and past history aid in identification of delusional disorder. With the client's permission, the clinician obtains details from earlier medical records, and engages in thorough discussion with the client's immediate family—helpful measures in determining whether delusions are present. The clinician may use a semi-structured interview called a mental status examination to assess the patient's concentration, memory, understanding the individual's situation and logical thinking. The mental status examination is intended to reveal peculiar thought processes in the patient. The Peters Delusion Inventory (PDI) is a psychological test that focuses on identifying and understanding delusional thinking; but its use is more common in research than in clinical practice.

The fact that this individual has posted well over 500+ times on this thread and that this very wealthy and highly educated person believes that LCA management and Legal team actually reads this thread only solidifies your above diagnosis of this very sick individual..
 






Enough already with telling us how smart and rich you are, it's getting old.

Let's face the fact that your gripe is not about Labcorp and Medicare, it's about your obsessive hatred for one person.

If you are so smart you know a rational person does not post 500 times and if you are so very rich you can just walk away from the entire issue.

You just don't get the fact that it's way beyond anything tangible. I guess the question should be, why are you still posting?
 






The fact that this individual has posted well over 500+ times on this thread and that this very wealthy and highly educated person believes that LCA management and Legal team actually reads this thread only solidifies your above diagnosis of this very sick individual..

I suppose this is based on your extensive knowledge of......?

That's right. You never post anything of substance. One-line remarks are about as much as you can muster. I can't convince you to leave this board, so we'll keep taking swipes at each other, I suppose.
 






I suppose this is based on your extensive knowledge of......?

That's right. You never post anything of substance. One-line remarks are about as much as you can muster. I can't convince you to leave this board, so we'll keep taking swipes at each other, I suppose.

Wow, you know how to "cut and paste"
I am so impressed
Let me bow down to you as I am not worthy of
your "Cut and Pastedness"

....you are a sad sack.