• This Wednesday, March 30, is World Bipolar Disorder Day.

  • The opportunity to highlight the story of Laëtitia Payen, mother of a boy diagnosed with bipolar at the age of 5, after years of therapeutic wandering and family hell.

  • For 20 Minutes, she tells on video how she arrived at the diagnosis of bipolarity, while in France, psychiatric illness remains taboo, especially among children.

Deafening anger, raining insults, blows that don't stop… and suddenly, an avalanche of hugs and apologies.

From his early years, Stanislas disconcerted his parents and his big sister by his behavior out of the ordinary.

Autism, dys disorders, hyperactivity, hypersensitivity?

After many medical appointments and dozens of false leads, Stanislas' mother, Laëtitia Payen, came to a surprising conclusion: her 5-year-old son suffered from bipolar disorder.

A disabling mental illness, especially when it is not diagnosed, which is rare to recognize in a child.

Since then, this iconographer has become president of the Bicycle association, which supports families of children and adolescents suffering from mood disorders.

After years of crises, doubts, guilt, homemade methods, readings and meetings, Laëtitia Payen wanted to tell her story in 

Mon enfant cyclone, le taboo des enfants bipolar*,

which has just been published.

And yes in France when a child has a broken leg we operate... When he has a mental health concern, we wait... The urgency is knowledge!

https://t.co/wsVdE27ASy

– Bicycle Association (@Bicycle_asso) January 31, 2020

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A track

"too often excluded from the outset in France"

The objective is not to give a diagnosis, but to suggest a track

"too often excluded from the outset in France to all helpless parents who have tried everything, who have searched, consulted, without finding solutions".

On the occasion of World Bipolar Disorder Day,

20 Minutes

met Laëtitia Payen to ask her a few questions on video.

She recognizes it: nothing is easy in this obstacle course.

However, Stanislas was diagnosed at the age of 5.

And today at 13, he is well and he is in school.

But is it too early to lock a child in a box and give him medicine?

“It was a relief for him, the diagnosis.

He told me "it's not me who's bad".

The advantage of early diagnosis is to delay taking medication and give as little as possible.

When we think of bipolar disorder, we immediately think of medication.

However, it is the reverse.

Anyway, these children will have labels and receive treatments, but often not the right ones, at high doses, with hospitalizations.

And tragedies: attempted suicide for children, reports for parents and it can go as far as placement.

»

That's why she fights with her association Bicycle to support parents... and educate caregivers.

“No parent wants to psychiatrize their child!

Like many parents in the association, the diagnosis gave us back our freedom.

It is a problem for people who do not face this disease.

»

But the author reassures: “not all children who have behavioral problems are bipolar!

The crisis of opposition or adolescence, it passes.

In the bipolar child, not only will it not go away, but it will get worse.

»

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