Title: Mental Health Revolution
1Mental Health Revolution
- Pat Bracken
- RCPsych Oct 28th 2008
2Mental Health Revolution
- Changing ideas about revolution
- The nature of the dominant paradigm in mental
health - Causes of, and justification for, revolutionary
change - Implications for our profession
3Che Guevara
4Killing Fields of Cambodia
5John Gray
- the world in which we find ourselves at the
start of the new millennium is littered with the
debris of utopian projects
6Copernicus
7Kuhn paradigms
-
- when paradigms change, the world itself
changes with them
8Technological Approach
Cognitive approaches
Language of Management
Medical model
Technological Approach
9Main Assumptions of the Technological Paradigm
- The problem to be addressed has to due with a
faulty mechanism or process of some sort - The mechanism or process can be modelled in
causal terms, ie described in a way that is
universal, a way that works regardless of the
context - Technological interventions are instrumental.
They are not to do with opinions, values,
relationships or priorities.
10Technical idiom
- Bipolar disorder is a complex, recurrent mood
disorder, and its impact on everyday life can be
devastating. Although pharmacological
interventions remain the primary tool in its
management, medicines cannot control all aspects
and consequences of the disorder. Psychosocial
interventions target issues untouched by
pharmacological treatments, such as medication
adherence, awareness and understanding of the
disorder, early identification of prodromal
symptoms, and coping skills (Beynon et al,
2008).
11 Modernist Psychiatry
- Primary discourse is technical focused on
diagnosis and classification, causal
explanations, evidence-based interventions (EBM) - Other issues become secondary
- ethics, values and priorities,
- meanings and contexts,
- relationships and power
-
12Why is Technological Paradigm dominant?
- Cultural support
- Patient expectations
- Underscores professional roles
- Pharmaceutical industry
13Roy Porter
- Indeed, the rise of psychological medicine
was more the consequence than the cause of the
rise of the insane asylum. Psychiatry could
flourish once, but not before, large numbers of
inmates were crowded into asylums
14Why is Technological Paradigm so dominant?
- Cultural support
- Patient expectations
- Underscores professional roles
- Pharmaceutical industry
15Role of Service-user Organisations in the
Technological Paradigm
- -consultation
- -help with fund-raising and recruiting subjects
for research - -their expertise secondary to that of the
technical knowledge of the professional
1620th Century Psychiatry
Focus on technology of diagnosis and treatment
relationships
Social position
Ethics and values
Cultural issues
17Direction of Revolutionary Change
Discourse centred on -values/ethics -meanings/co
ntexts -relationships/power
Appropriate research
Training priorities
Service models
Use of drugs and therapy
18Challenges to technological paradigm
- Postmodern culture
- Changing understanding of technology itself
- Moves away from the embrace of Pharma
19(No Transcript)
20Why Revolution is Justified
- Empirical evidence
- Conceptual analysis
- Political reasons
- Ethical imperative
21CBT
- little evidence that specific cognitive
interventions significantly increase the
effectiveness of the therapy (Longmore and
Worrell, 2007)
22Why Revolution is Justified
- Empirical evidence
- Conceptual analysis
- Political reasons
- Ethical imperative
23Psychiatry and Philosophy
24Why Revolution is Justified
- Empirical evidence
- Conceptual analysis
- Political reasons
- Ethical imperative
25Ethical
-
- if we say that we are working to develop
user-centred services, training and research
programmes then it is simply unethical to carry
on as if the user movement did not exist.
26Mad Pride in Cork
27Icarus Project
- we shared a vision of being bipolar that
differs radically from the narrow model put forth
by the medical establishment, and wanted to
create a space for people like us to articulate
the way we understand ourselves, our disorder,
and our place in the world.
28Implications for Psychiatry
- Rethinking psychopathology
- A different understanding of expertise
- Training
- Research
- Service developments
29Insights from Recovery Literature
- Recovery often made through paths that are
alternatives to drugs and psychotherapy - Importance of loss of social position that comes
with being a service user - Community development approach
30Relationship with service user movement
- From Consultation to collaboration