St Edmunds Hospital
St Mary's Square, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, IP33 2AA DirectionsPhone
Opening hours
Mon - Sun: 24 hours
Visiting hours for Inpatients are from 9am to 7pm.
Car parking
Parking available
Psychiatry is a broad medical specialty, which covers a whole range of mental health disorders.
NOTE: The St Edmunds Hospital does not offer a 24-hour psychiatry service. For anyone in need of emergency care, please contact your nearest NHS provider.
St Edmunds Hospital is located on the beautiful St. Mary's Square, just across from the Greene King Brewery in Bury St Edmunds. People visit us from Newmarket, Diss, Sudbury, Thetford, Woolpit and Mildenhall. We also see patients from Hadleigh, Stowmarket, Ely and Haverhill. If you’re living in one of these areas and looking for a private hospital near you, our team is ready and waiting to help you.
Psychiatry is a broad medical specialty, which covers a whole range of mental health disorders.
Our Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist is experienced in treating a broad range of psychiatric disorders, which include organic psychiatric disorders, schizophrenia, depressive disorders, bipolar affective disorder, anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, personality disorders, alcohol and substance misuse disorders, and neurodevelopmental disorders, such as Asperger’s Syndrome and ADHD.
Our consultant has a special interest in Bioidentical Hormone Therapy. It is known that testosterone in men and oestrogen and progesterone in women (as well as other hormones) impact very significantly on mood, anxiety, memory, and sleep. Our consultant therefore takes a holistic approach, measuring patients’ hormones and balancing them wherever possible. This intervention can be used instead of or as well as prescribing medication.
Below is an at-a-glance list of the conditions our consultant sees regularly:
From a hormonal perspective our consultant also treats:
Our Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist here at The St Edmunds Hospital is seeing more and more patients who present with ADHD in adulthood.
Patients may present with a feeling of ‘something always not been quite right but couldn’t put their finger on it’. Comments like ‘daydreaming at school, couldn’t concentrate’ are common. It is a condition that may get missed during childhood, presents in adulthood, and starts to interfere with a person’s day-to-day life. Often, these patients present with another mental disorder but, in a lot of cases, the underlying cause of their symptoms is ADHD.
The reason we see more cases is due to society generally becoming more aware of the condition. Before, it was an area which has been under-diagnosed, whereas in the USA it is much more prominent.
Patients may seek an assessment because they have read about the condition and think they have it themselves. More people are looking for help for the condition.
Females tend to be missed more in childhood as they often don’t tend present with hyperactivity and therefore don’t misbehave at school. Closer inspection, however, reveals they would daydream and not absorb information in class.
Symptoms of ADHD in adulthood can include:
Patients with ADHD tend to struggle with the demands of everyday life. They tend to take on too much, struggle to cope, and feel overwhelmed.
They may present with low mood, anxiety, and sleep problems. Only when you dig deeper you may find that a patient has attention issues, can’t concentrate or focus, and in the workplace they may not be achieving tasks or getting things done. As a result, bosses may be frustrated because they are a bit ‘all over the place’ and can't take on too much information.
The good news, however, is that ADHD is very treatable with medication, and dramatic results can be achieved.
These are very common conditions we see here at The St Edmunds Hospital, and patients present with:
Our consultant will also take a mental state examination, which is a snapshot view of how the patient is presenting at the time we see them – this is in terms of their mood, anxiety, sleep, thoughts, and negative thinking.
At the end of the appointment, our consultant will let the patient know what they think in terms of a diagnosis, and they will come up with a plan together, including treatment. The consultant will then write a report, and send it to the patient’s GP, detailing what happened during the appointment.
With a new patient, the consultant may ask the GP to do routine blood tests to check thyroid function, or kidney or liver function, as these may have an impact on how the patient is presenting and, as a result, may impact on their mental state. This may be done to check there is nothing underlying, but it’s really all about the assessment, says our consultant. When a hormonal condition is suspected, blood tests will include measuring hormones.
Elsewhere, treatment consists of medication and therapy in most cases, usually CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy).
Our consultant will liaise with therapists in the area to take on the patient, and then the consultant's role is to oversee their treatment to prescribe medication and to review their progress, their response to medication and their response to therapy.
There is a wealth of reasons to choose St Edmunds Hospital for psychiatry, including the fact it is in a convenient location and is therefore easily accessible to people in the local area.
Here are some, at-a-glance reasons why you might choose St Edmunds Hospital for your initial consultation:
Locally, people visit from Cavendish, Kersey and Lavenham to name just a few places.