Specialized hospital 8 Nightingale neurosis clinic.

Really helped!

The wait for the first appointment is 2 weeks, then we still have to wait for hospitalization.

I thought for a very long time whether I should go to bed. I had panic attacks, VSD, IBS, trembling, dizziness, fears, anxiety, bad dreams and the whole bunch. Now, a month after discharge, I want to definitely say that it’s worth going to bed! They helped me a lot there. Therefore, I am publishing this review on all the resources where I looked for reviews myself, in order to help those who are also in doubt make a decision. In order. For about 3 months I was tormented by my symptoms, I went to paid doctors, they prescribed something, it helped a little, but then it all came back. The symptoms were getting worse and I already felt like I was going crazy. I was scared to leave the house, I was afraid of fainting and falling into a puddle where no one would save me. I’ve heard about the neurosis clinic for a long time and started Googling reviews. The reviews were very mixed. From “wow, they helped” to “horror, they made me hallucinate.” Imagine a person who is already afraid of everything, and now they are frightened by hallucinations. But I listened to myself and made an appointment, because lying at home was already unbearably bad, and my husband still didn’t understand what was happening and thought that I was suffering from garbage. I got an appointment with Kaledin. A pleasant young guy immediately reassured me that I had “ordinary neurosis”, that I was not dying, they had half the hospital with the same thing and would help me. I asked how I wanted to be treated, at home or in the hospital. To the question: “Which is better?”, he answered that usually families ask to go to the hospital to rest. I agreed. Hospitalization was scheduled after 5 days. I remember the first days in the hospital vaguely. I cried at receptions, telling how unhappy I was and how bad I felt. I ended up in the 6th department. Head of Pose, doctor - Krylov. The first impression is that everything is not as scary as I thought. Very nice and understanding doctors, nurses (special bow to Zemfira, she is the best!), double rooms, toilet and shower. I was prescribed pills, psychotherapy, massage, showers, group lectures. Bliss! God, why didn’t I want to go to bed here? To be fair, I’ll say that it’s so cool, apparently, only in the 6th department. […]. The situation where everyone understands you makes things much easier. If at home they looked at me like I was crazy, here everyone is just like you - they support me and you understand that you are not alone. The contingent is half pensioners, 30 percent people are about 40 years old, and 20 percent are young people under 30+. That is, at any age you can find a friend in misfortune and pour out your soul. The first few days they give you sleeping pills to calm you down. So you sleep a lot and feel a little stupid. Not a vegetable, no. Just sleepy and out of this world. But this is even good, because it blocks panic attacks. On the fourth day you start going for procedures. Your head is still a little stupid, but somehow you move automatically and are not afraid to fall - if anything happens, there are medical staff everywhere, they will help. A week later, side effects from the medications begin. Who has what? My arms and legs were twitching and my jaw was shaking. Not severe, not like a seizure, but overall unpleasant. […]. That is, yes, the drugs are strong, and many have side effects. But I’ll be honest - compared to what happened to me before the hospital, the side effects are minor and they are quite tolerable. If you can't wait, you have to wait it out. If it’s really bad, go to the doctor and change your pills. All! There is nothing fatal about this. We have all drank alcohol at one time or another and had too much alcohol at least once in our lives. Yes, it was bad. But they survived. Everything is tolerable. It's the same with pills. So don't be afraid! Closer to discharge (I’ve been in bed for 2 weeks now, not a month like before), the side effects were still there, and I began to think (like many there) that the doctors had chosen something wrong, that they didn’t care about me and generally wanted to cripple me . Now time has passed, and I understand that this is not so. It’s just that the body is just getting used to it, “sausaging” both physically and mentally. This is normal, and if tolerable, but overall it’s better than before - you just have to wait. When I was discharged I was crying - I was afraid and didn’t want to go home. A month later, what can I say. I'm happy that I lay there! Now I have completely restored my mobility, performance, and thinking. There were no panic attacks. The symptoms of the disease disappeared completely. The anxiety has passed. The only thing is that sometimes my arms and legs still twitch. But this is only noticeable to me. This is becoming less and less every day, and soon, I hope, it will go away completely. I have to take the pills for another six months. After discharge, I already went to a paid doctor and adjusted the treatment. Because you should take the antidepressant that was prescribed, but the antipsychotic and tranquilizer can and should be adjusted - reduce the dose. I won’t write the names of all the tablets, because it varies from person to person, but Pantocalcin helped a lot with dizziness! In general, great heartfelt gratitude to the work of the clinic. Special thanks to doctors Pose and Krylov for their kindness and sympathy. Be healthy! Hooray!

21.10.19 11:20:20

Hello! Thank you for taking the time to leave a review about our center! Unfortunately, due to the increased number of requests, it is really necessary to schedule a visit to the doctor in advance. We make every effort to reduce waiting times. Thank you for your kind words addressed to our specialists. We are glad that along with effective treatment you found understanding and support. We hope that the achieved positive effect of treatment will be long-lasting and stable. Your feedback allows us to improve!

In 1972, the hospital was reorganized into the “Neurosis Clinic” and since that time has specialized in the treatment of borderline forms of mental disorders. Over many years of work, the Clinic has accumulated experience in the selection and complex treatment of this group of patients.
Today the hospital is the largest in the country(1100 beds) is a medical and preventive institution specializing in the treatment of mental disorders of the neurotic range.
The clinic has all the necessary facilities for diagnosing and treating both mental pathology itself and its somatic components, which ensures a high percentage of achieving a pronounced improvement in the condition of patients.

Branches are functioning:
Consultative and polyclinic (headed by Yuri Aleksandrovich Anosov) is a structural unit of the clinic that carries out the continuity of the hospital with clinics and medical units of the city.
The consultative and polyclinic department resolves the issue of sending a patient for treatment to one of the clinic’s departments, a day hospital or a country branch, as well as outpatient follow-up care for patients discharged from the hospital.
Indications for referring patients for treatment to the Clinic in accordance with ICD-10 are:
1.Mental disorders caused by brain damage and dysfunction or physical illness (F 06.xxx)

1.1 Non-psychotic affective disorders
1.2 Organic anxiety disorders
1.3 Organic emotionally labile (asthenic) disorders
1.4 Organic dissociative disorders
1.5 Mild cognitive impairment (F 06.7)
1.6 Personality and behavioral disorders caused by disease, damage or dysfunction of the brain (F 07.xx).

2. Depressive episodes without psychotic symptoms (F 32.xx; F33.xx).
3. Neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders (F 4x.xx).
4. Behavioral syndromes associated with physiological disorders and physical factors (F 5x.xx).
5.Personality and behavior disorders in adulthood (F 60.xx).
Contraindications for referral for treatment are:
1. Endogenous mental illnesses with psychotic (delusional, hallucinatory) symptoms and pronounced personality changes.
2.Psychopathy with antisocial behavior disorders - dissocial personality disorder (F 60.2x).
3.Psychoorganic disorders in dementia.
4.Alcoholism and drug addiction.
5.Severe somatic and neurological diseases.
6. Infectious and sexually transmitted diseases
7. Condition after surgery
8. Pregnancy.
The inpatient department of the Neurosis Clinic consists of 16 treatment departments, where complex treatment of patients is carried out.