I reference this enough and use his case as example (not epitome, mind you, I wouldn't go that far); he was a child psychiatrist, rather affluent clientele too, and got mixed up in a love triangle that he was oblivious to. He subsequently was murdered and (of course) people lamented over his passing, even expected distaste, due his prestige (caste) and the usual reproach of the unappreciative perpetrators. He was providing them financial support and really nothing in exchange. That's how nice he was.
Apparently one of the reasons why people thought so highly of him was because he'd even give his patients little gifts. The toys were small stuffed animals & whatnot, not dissimilar from the kind in the claw vending machines. So they'd receive cheap ephemeral objects and it might natural for the thing to have some sentimental value. (I haven't looked to see if there's any report of people claiming to have one, incidentally. ) With his death the patients would've been notified and reassigned new doctor, presumably. They would've known the real loss, as children, but would have something to remember him by. Good enough story to launch a horror movie franchise (but maybe something like that's been done before).
The reality still exists too though, that the doctor is the one, despite being in committed relationship, began spending copious amounts of time and money, even traveling (which is always risky), pursuing a young woman who went ahead and took advantage of him. People want to believe that he was fine with being in platonic relationship; not expecting anything more from the young lady? He was obsessed with her and those kind of people are dangerous as well. At any rate, he should have known better.

I haven't even gone into anything about his particular occupation and specialty. Maybe convenient idea is that he prescribes the proper medication(s) and/or provides counseling, therapy, or interaction which provides him with job security. Thinking of him in the light of being a confidence man, not really simple grifter, but snake-oil salesman. There's been countless medical malpractices that would just drag on, unrelentingly, the "marks" are at the disadvantage, and the unethical, greedy hubris of some people is an ubiquitous problem, regardless of profession.
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) had hundreds of contributing doctors and related professionals. There is no "biomarker" to effectively test for psychiatric disorder (or "illness"), e.g., blood analysis, or whatnot and the entire concept is based on a subjective evaluation, or in other words, a doctor observes, interacts with, scrutinizes, a person exhibiting behavioral and/or emotional aberration(s), and classifies the patient in whatever category of "disorder" that is most predominant (as far as the specialist can tell from his/her/their perspective, anyway).
So, to simplify, a person who's morose, dejected, introverted, and wants to stay in bed all the time would be "depressed". A person who has difficulty verbalizing or with articulation about their lives might have a way to try to make sense of their reality in juxtaposition to what others need the patient's experience to be like for expediency sake. (Everybody's busy, so just go along, kinda thing.)

So the late Officer Paul Gesi, City of Northglenn PD, didn't make a call to reach out for help. Knowing the law as he did, I speculate that he understood what would happen and his life would dramatically change since he'd have to submit to psychiatric care. He'd be labeled as "mentally ill". The preceding link is to some ebooks with user va and then vets to access. There's an old copy of Anne Rogers "A Sociology of Mental Health and Illness" so there can be no more plausible deniability. People might want to know that the woman speaking in the video below isn't alone because there are people who are labeled "mentally ill" who share similar categorized experiences but are unable to be so candid about their history.
7News-clip-grant-st
I have more information concerning the Colorado HB26-1285 and its inherent problems at https://kylemullica.org/