social psychiatry
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Author(s):  
FLÁVIA CRISTINA SILVEIRA LEMOS ◽  
BRUNO JÁY MERCÊS DE LIMA ◽  
DIEGO HENRIQUE DA SILVA TRUJILLO ◽  
ADIVAN JARBAS MOREIRA SOARES ◽  
THIAGO DA SILVA PINHEIRO ◽  
...  

  Este artigo busca traçar em formato de ensaio teórico uma trama histórica de alguns operadores analíticos dos procedimentos de psiquiatrização da sociedade e da medicalização dos corpos por meio de práticas sociais normalizadoras e disciplinares. Pensar estes acontecimentos e como são interrogados e trabalhados por Michel Foucault é uma proposta importante e nos auxilia a fazer perguntas a respeito do presente na medida em que diversas análises permitem correlações com a atualidade vivida e, assim, possibilita problematizar a considerável força da psiquiatria social hoje, reconfigurando as políticas de saúde mental disciplinadoras por um viés medicalizante e normalizador cada vez mais intenso em nome da defesa da sociedade. Logo, o presente texto contribui para diversas áreas de modo transdisciplinar no trabalho atento de desnaturalização histórica dos processos de medicalização e psiquiatrização da vida como norma disciplinar e social.Palavras-chave: História da psiquiatrização. Medicalização. Sociedade. Disciplina. Norma.Historical plots about psychiatry, discipline and medicalization in some of Michel Foucault's lensesABSTRACTThis article seeks to trace, in a theoretical essay format, a historial plots of some analytical operators of the psychiatric procedures of society and the medicalization of bodies through normalizing and disciplinary social practices. Thinking about these events and how they are interrogated and worked on by Michel Foucault is an important proposal and helps us to ask questions about the present, as several analyzes allow correlations with the current experience and, thus, make it possible to problematize the considerable strength of social psychiatry. today, reconfiguring disciplinary mental health policies through an increasingly intense medicalizing and normalizing bias in the name of defending society. Therefore, this text contributes to several areas in a transdisciplinary way in the careful work of historical denaturalization of the processes of medicalization and psychiatrization of life as a social and disciplinary norm.Keywords: History of psychiatrization. Medicalization. Society. Subject. Standard. 


2021 ◽  
pp. 002087282110116
Author(s):  
Kristina Engwall ◽  
Palle Storm

We discuss the pandemic strategies in Sweden concerning social psychiatry during the first wave. We argue that the omission of social workers’ perspective in the COVID-19 strategy has negatively impacted clients with psychiatric disabilities and has also weakened the overall pandemic strategy.


Author(s):  
Ana Antić

AbstractIn the mid-twentieth century, in the aftermath of WWII and the Nazi atrocities and in the midst of decolonisation, a new discipline of transcultural psychiatry was being established and institutionalised. This was part and parcel of a global political project in the course of which Western psychiatry attempted to leave behind its colonial legacies and entanglements, and lay the foundation for a more inclusive, egalitarian communication between Western and non-Western concepts of mental illness and healing. In this period, the infrastructure of post-colonial global and transcultural psychiatry was set up, and leading psychiatric figures across the world embarked on identifying, debating and sometimes critiquing the universal psychological characteristics and psychopathological mechanisms supposedly shared among all cultures and civilisations. The article will explore how this psychiatric, social and cultural search for a new definition of ‘common humanity’ was influenced and shaped by the concurrent global rise of social psychiatry. In the early phases of transcultural psychiatry, a large number of psychiatrists were very keen to determine how cultural and social environments shaped the basic traits of human psychology, and ‘psy’ practitioners and anthropologist from all over the world sought to re-define the relationship between culture, race and individual psyche. Most of them worked within the universalist framework, which posited that cultural differences merely formed a veneer of symptoms and expressions while the universal core of mental illness remained the same across all cultures. The article will argue that, even in this context, which explicitly challenged the hierarchical and racist paradigms of colonial psychiatry, the founding generations of transcultural psychiatrists from Western Europe and North America tended to conceive of broader environmental determinants of mental health and pathology in the decolonising world in fairly reductionist terms—focusing almost exclusively on ‘cultural difference’ and cultural, racial and ethnic ‘traditions’, essentialising and reifying them in the process, and failing to establish some common sociological or economic categories of analysis of Western and non-Western ‘mentalities’. On the other hand, it was African and Asian psychiatrists as well as Marxist psychiatrists from Eastern Europe who insisted on applying those broader social psychiatry concepts—such as social class, occupation, socio-economic change, political and group pressures and relations etc.—which were quickly becoming central to mental health research in the West but were largely missing from Western psychiatrists’ engagement with the decolonising world. In this way, some of the leading non-Western psychiatrists relied on social psychiatry to establish the limits of psychiatric universalism, and challenge some of its Eurocentric and essentialising tendencies. Even though they still subscribed to the predominant universalist framework, these practitioners invoked social psychiatry to draw attention to universalism’s internal incoherence, and sought to revise the lingering evolutionary thinking in transcultural psychiatry. They also contributed to re-imagining cross-cultural encounters and exchanges as potentially creative and progressive (whereas early Western transcultural psychiatry primarily viewed the cross-cultural through the prism of pathogenic and traumatic ‘cultural clash’). Therefore, the article will explore the complex politics of the shifting and overlapping definitions of ‘social’ and ‘cultural’ factors in mid-twentieth century transcultural psychiatry, and aims to recover the revolutionary voices of non-Western psychiatrists and their contributions to the global re-drawing of the boundaries of humanity in the second half of the twentieth century.


Author(s):  
Annette Sofie Davidsen ◽  
Johan Davidsen ◽  
Alexandra Brandt Ryborg Jønsson ◽  
Maria Haahr Nielsen ◽  
Pia Kürstein Kjellberg ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Patients with severe mental illness (SMI) have shorter life expectancy than people without SMI, mainly due to overmortality from physical diseases. They are treated by professionals in three different health and social care sectors with sparse collaboration between them, hampering coherent treatment. Previous studies have shown difficulties involved in establishing such collaboration. As the preparatory phase of an intervention to improve physical health of people with SMI and increase collaboration across sector borders, we explored different actors’ experiences of barriers for collaboration. Method We collected qualitative data from patients, professionals in general practice, psychiatry and social psychiatry involved in the treatment of these patients. Data consisted of notes from meetings and observations, interviews, focus groups and workshops. Analysis was by Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Results The study revealed many obstacles to collaboration and coherent treatment, including the consultation structures in general practice, sectors being subject to different legislation, and incompatible IT systems. Professionals in general practice and social psychiatry felt that they were left with the responsibility for actions taken by hospital psychiatry without opportunity to discuss their concerns with psychiatrists. There were also cultural differences between health care and social psychiatry, expressed in ideology and language. Social psychiatry had an existential approach to recovery, whereas the views of health professionals were linked to symptom control and based on outcomes. Meanwhile, patients were left in limbo between these separate ideologies with no leadership in place to promote dialogue and integrate treatments between the sectors. Conclusion Many obstacles to integrated trans-sectoral treatment of patients with SMI seem related to a lack of an overriding leadership and organizational support to establish collaboration and remove barriers related to legislation and IT. However, professional and ideological barriers also contribute. Psychiatry does not consider general practice to be part of the treatment team although general practitioners are left with responsibility for decisions taken in psychiatry; and different ideologies and treatment principles in psychiatry and municipal social psychiatry hamper the dialogue between them. There is a need to rethink the organization to avoid that the three sectors live autonomous lives with different cultures and lack of collaboration.


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