1 / 73

EXCLUDING CRITICAL PSYCHIATRY

EXCLUDING CRITICAL PSYCHIATRY. D B Double. Recent Psychiatric Bulletin editorial. New ‘culture war’ between postpsychiatry and academic psychiatry. Recent Psychiatric Bulletin editorial. New ‘culture war’ between postpsychiatry and academic psychiatry

thu
Download Presentation

EXCLUDING CRITICAL PSYCHIATRY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EXCLUDING CRITICAL PSYCHIATRY D B Double

  2. Recent Psychiatric Bulletin editorial • New ‘culture war’ between postpsychiatry and academic psychiatry

  3. Recent Psychiatric Bulletin editorial • New ‘culture war’ between postpsychiatry and academic psychiatry • Postpsychiatry strikingly similar to ‘anti-psychiatry’

  4. Recent Psychiatric Bulletin editorial • ‘Anti-psychiatry’ used by the mainstream to disparage any opposition

  5. Recent Psychiatric Bulletin editorial • ‘Anti-psychiatry’ used by the mainstream to disparage any opposition • Critical psychiatry seeks to avoid the polarisation engendered by anti-psychiatry

  6. Anti-psychiatry defined by the mainstream • International movement against psychiatry which is “anti-medical, anti-therapeutic, anti-institutional and anti-scientific” (Roth, 1973)

  7. Anti-psychiatry defined by the mainstream • International movement against psychiatry which is “anti-medical, anti-therapeutic, anti-institutional and anti-scientific” (Roth, 1973) • Generally seen as a passing phase in the history of psychiatry

  8. What’s so threatening about anti-psychiatry? • Attack on psychiatrists' use of diagnosis, drug and ECT treatment and involuntary hospitalisation

  9. What’s so threatening about anti-psychiatry? • Attack on psychiatrists' use of diagnosis, drug and ECT treatment and involuntary hospitalisation • Some activists do want to abolish psychiatry

  10. RD Laing (1927-1989) • Not an anti-psychiatrist

  11. RD Laing (1927-1989) • Not an anti-psychiatrist • Athough agreed with anti-psychiatric thesis “by and large psychiatry functions to exclude and repress those elements society wants excluded and repressed”

  12. RD Laing (1927-1989) • Madness is much more understandable than commonly assumed

  13. RD Laing (1927-1989) • Madness is much more understandable than commonly assumed • So-called normality is too often an abdication of our true potentialities

  14. Thomas Szasz (1920-) • Not an anti-psychiatrist, although also not a “psychiatrist”, as psychiatry is associated with coercion

  15. Thomas Szasz (1920-) • Not an anti-psychiatrist, although also not a “psychiatrist”, as psychiatry is associated with coercion • “Because both the anti-psychiatrists and I oppose certain aspects of psychiatry, our views are combined and confused, and we are often identified as the common enemies of all of psychiatry”

  16. Thomas Szasz (1920-) • Mental illness is a myth, as disease is physical

  17. Thomas Szasz (1920-) • Mental illness is a myth, as disease is physical • State should not interfere in mental health practice or medicine in general

  18. The “anti” element in anti-psychiatry • Psychiatry objectifies people and therefore becomes part of the problem rather than the solution to mental health problems

  19. The “anti” element in anti-psychiatry • Psychiatry objectifies people and therefore becomes part of the problem rather than the solution to mental health problems • May have gone too far in abandoning notion of mental pathology

  20. Excesses of anti-psychiatry • Laing ultimately more interested in personal authenticity than changing psychiatry

  21. Excesses of anti-psychiatry • Laing ultimately more interested in personal authenticity than changing psychiatry • Few would want to go as far as Szasz in proposing no mental health law

  22. David Cooper (1931-1986) • Psychiatry and anti-psychiatry (1967)

  23. David Cooper (1931-1986) • Psychiatry and anti-psychiatry (1967) • Excursion into family, sexual and revolutionary politics

  24. Is critique of psychiatry really so threatening? • Reflective practice should be encouraged

  25. Is critique of psychiatry really so threatening? • Reflective practice should be encouraged • Psychiatry can be too dogmatic

  26. Is critique of psychiatry really so threatening? • Professional security needs should not be overriding

  27. Is critique of psychiatry really so threatening? • Professional security needs should not be overriding • Critical psychiatry should not be tarnished with the same rotten reputation as anti‑psychiatry

  28. Pluralism in psychiatry (1900-1970) • Psychoanalysis – Freud first spoke publicly in USA at Clark University in 1909

  29. Pluralism in psychiatry (1900-1970) • Psychoanalysis – Freud first spoke publicly in USA at Clark University in 1909 • Pragmatic approach of Adolf Meyer - Psychobiology

  30. Pluralism in psychiatry (1900-1970) • Psychoanalysis – Freud first spoke publicly in USA at Clark University in 1909 • Pragmatic approach of Adolf Meyer - Psychobiology • Interpersonal approach of Harry Stack Sullivan focused on the person

  31. Critical psychiatry website • www.anti-psychiatry.co.uk

  32. Critical psychiatry website • www.anti-psychiatry.co.uk • www.uea.ac.uk/~wp276

  33. Critical psychiatry website • www.anti-psychiatry.co.uk • www.uea.ac.uk/~wp276 • Critical Psychiatry Network www.criticalpsychiatry.co.uk

  34. Reservations about teaching critical psychiatry to medical students • Asked to take down webpages from my personal webspace

  35. Reservations about teaching critical psychiatry to medical students • Asked to take down webpages from my personal webspace • Consultant colleagues concerned I may mislead students

  36. Reservations about teaching critical psychiatry to medical students • Asked to take down webpages from my personal webspace • Consultant colleagues concerned I may mislead students • Suggested university should not be seen as linked with critical psychiatry

  37. Critical psychiatry is a legitimate academic and clinical activity • University encourages both staff and students to use their personal webspace

  38. Critical psychiatry is a legitimate academic and clinical activity • University encourages both staff and students to use their personal webspace • Academic freedom is essential for the development of unorthodox or new opinions

  39. Critical psychiatry is a legitimate academic and clinical activity • University encourages both staff and students to use their personal webspace • Academic freedom is essential for the development of unorthodox or new opinions • Doctors should be encouraged to think about their professional role

  40. Critical Psychiatry Network • Formed in 1999

  41. Critical Psychiatry Network • Formed in 1999 • Small group of psychiatrists

  42. Critical Psychiatry Network • Formed in 1999 • Small group of psychiatrists • Develop a critique of the contemporary psychiatric system.

  43. Promoting the critical mental health movement • Ranges from reform to revolution

  44. Promoting the critical mental health movement • Ranges from reform to revolution • Psychiatry can be practised without the justification of postulating brain pathology as the basis for mental illness

  45. Promoting the critical mental health movement • Ranges from reform to revolution • Psychiatry can be practised without the justification of postulating brain pathology as the basis for mental illness • Mental disorders must show through the brain but not always in the brain

  46. Historical perspective on critique of psychiatric diagnosis • Crisis of confidence created in the 1960s and 70s

  47. Historical perspective on critique of psychiatric diagnosis • Crisis of confidence created in the 1960s and 70s • Particularly about its vague diagnostic categories

  48. Historical perspective on critique of psychiatric diagnosis • Crisis of confidence created in the 1960s and 70s • Particularly about its vague diagnostic categories • Rosenhan - psychiatric diagnosis is subjective and does not reflect inherent patient characteristics

  49. Mainstream response • Psychiatrists do not detect pseudopatients simulating signs of mental illness – Spitzer “…assuredly an unreliable system must be invalid”

  50. Mainstream response • Psychiatrists do not detect pseudopatients simulating signs of mental illness – Spitzer “…assuredly an unreliable system must be invalid” • Operational diagnostic criteria for psychiatric disorders, initially for research, and then for psychiatric classifications, such as DSM-III

More Related