Dr. P.N. Mistry

3.7 ( 34 reviews )

Punctuality

Ratings for Dr. P.N. Mistry

3
Staff
5
Punctuality
2
Helpfulness
1
Knowledge

It’s been about 9 years since I saw DR. Mystery. I was misdiagnosed and prescribed drugs that had very negative long term side effects. I was never given a kidney function test and my body systems were not monitored while in treatment. I was out on medication that may have given me long term neurological problems. Tardive dystonia is a real thing. Don’t take antipsychotics without educating yourself first. Because he surely will not educate you on the risks. These meds are strong, and powerful mind altering substances that should be prescribed more responsibly.


I may be permanently marred from working with this man. There is little justice for me. I just hope I can find a good neurologist for free that can help me rehabilitate.


I gave one star for knowledge, because he should have known better than to put a 120 lbs woman who never touched substances on that many neuroleptic drugs. Shame on the Langley mental health team for their irresponsible actions.

Submitted June 29, 2020

5
Staff
4
Punctuality
5
Helpfulness
4
Knowledge

Dr. Mistry is a great doctor I've been a patient for almost 20 years, helped me get stable and keep me stable BUT I don't get why the receptionist is called rude she is soooo nice and always helps if I need to change appointment or when paperwork needs done she does it right away and always super nice when I come for appointments

Submitted March 28, 2020

5
Staff
5
Punctuality
5
Helpfulness
5
Knowledge

Dr. Mistry has been an outstanding doctor of mine for years. He is always abreast of the latest and greatest information. He is able to counsel me effectively and give good, positive, helpful advice. I am truly grateful for Dr. Mistry and his expertise in his field.

Submitted Jan. 27, 2020

5
Staff
5
Punctuality
5
Helpfulness
5
Knowledge

Dr. Mistry has been working with me for 10 years. I'm not easy and my diagnosis was threefold. Very tough. At every monthly appointment he took new notes as my disability changes. He has sent me for two other professional options including a team at UBC. What I'm saying is he tries very hard to work with you and if he needs support from others in his field he asks for it. Like he's done with me. He is compassionate and professional. I wouldn't see anyone else.

Submitted Jan. 19, 2020

5
Staff
5
Punctuality
5
Helpfulness
5
Knowledge

Dr. Mistry has changed my life. Let it be known I’m a woman who’s seen the most and he has given me not only the gift know being his patient but helping me to understand and practice CBT. This man is amazing a true angel.

Submitted July 25, 2019

5
Staff
5
Punctuality
5
Helpfulness
5
Knowledge

This man has changed my life. He’s taught me so much about myself. He’s my third pill ,my -extra prescription-.
Outstanding Dr
Wonderful man
Extreme compassion.
And his receptionist is such a lovely genuine woman.

Submitted Sept. 15, 2018

1
Staff
4
Punctuality
3
Helpfulness
3
Knowledge

Receptionist is rude, impatient and unpleasant.
Not impressed with the doctor’s lack of meaningful connection or interest in the patient. Would go elsewhere but the lack of psychiatrists in the area makes it difficult to change.

Submitted June 14, 2018

4
Staff
5
Punctuality
5
Helpfulness
5
Knowledge

Dr Mistry is the best psychiatrist I've ever had. He really listens, and was able to get me onto medications that not only worked for me, but didn't have intolerable side effects.

Submitted March 26, 2018

3
Staff
3
Punctuality
2
Helpfulness
1
Knowledge

Dr Mystry is a kind man, which makes him dangerous because it makes people listen to him. What it boils down to, is that he is more than comfortable, continuously prescribing medication that can possibly seriously damage your health long-term. I was the picture of health physically when I was diagnosed with PTSD and major depressive disorder when I was 26. I was put on olanzapine, xanax and cipralex. At the same time. Long-term for five years. PTSD is not treatable by medication, I do really wish that I knew this when I embarked on this journey . I'm currently 33, I went off of the medication two years ago but the complications to my health has seem to be far reaching. My body regulation systems are badly damaged. I was vomiting all the time at one point because of the drugs. The olanzapine caused postural problems so my shoulders would come forward and now my arms are in constant pain, my muscles wasted away because I couldn't exercise because my thermostat was screwed up and I was at risk for heat stroke if I exercised . It took me a year to enough Olanzapine with near heroin withdrawal like symptoms that spanned over 8-12 weeks. And early this year, I realize that my body could no longer tolerate any medication whatsoever because the drugs that I had previously been on a ruined my ability to metabolize medication without having toxic affects. I am doing better now, then I ever have in my entire life being medication free. I dealt with my PTSD naturally with psychotherapy, hypnosis, Meditation, exercise, good diet and spiritual work . However, it is a constant struggle to keep my health stable, I am often in constant pain because of what the drugs have done to my body. Medication is a double edge sword, and it should not be used long-term. Use it until you're stable and then get help. Discipline yourself like your life depends on it because it does. You have to do the work, don't just listen to the pill pushers because it's never a good long-term solution and it will destroy your health .

Submitted Dec. 27, 2017

1
Staff
5
Punctuality
4
Helpfulness
4
Knowledge

Dr Mistry is a terrific psychiatrist and has great people skills. He's extremely helpful and knows how to prioritize problems. His receptionist on the other hand is confrontational, condescending, rude and dismissive. As part of my job I deal with difficult people on a regular basis and she is still a challenge for me to deal with. It would be a real shame to switch offices based on a secretary but I feel I am nearly there.

Submitted Dec. 12, 2017