Title: Why Psychiatry needs Recovery
1Why Psychiatry needs
Recovery
yale program for recovery and community health
- Larry Davidson, Ph.D., Director
- Program for Recovery and Community Health
- Yale University School of Medicine and
- Institution for Social and Policy Studies
2Todays Agenda
- We usually focus on what psychiatry needs to do
to promote recovery - Today Id like to focus on what recovery can do
for psychiatry
3Is there cause for concern?
- Current backlash against pharmaceutical industry
due to excesses in use, misleading marketing,
poor quality control, etc. (additional assault of
autonomy of the field parallel to introduction of
managed care in 1980-90s) - Identification of clinical psychiatry with
medications to an almost exclusive degree,
resulting in lower quality of work life and
continued devaluing and distrust of the field by
both medicine and the public
4Appeal to evidence-based practices to gain
credibility, improve quality, etc., but
- What is the evidence base for psychiatry?
- or
- What would an evidence-based psychiatry look
like?
5What we know about treatment
- Only about 1/3 of individuals in need of
psychiatric treatment for a serious mental
illness receive any psychiatric care at all - Only about 70 of those people (with a psychotic
disorder) will respond at all to medications - Less than 20, and as low as 5, of those being
prescribed medications are receiving the most
appropriate and effective care available (i.e.,
evidence-based)
6 for serious mental illnesses
- Medication effects are limited primarily to
positive symptoms, which account the least for
the impairments or disabilities associated with
the condition - Second generation anti-psychotic medications
appear to be no more effective than their
predecessors, and to have equally (if not more)
serious, if different, side effects
7- About ¾ of people stop taking medications on
their own in less than 18 months after episode - About 80 of people will be rehospitalized within
5 years following a first episode - Cognitive behavioral psychotherapy reduces
positive symptoms and gains are maintained after
treatmentbut ecological validity is unknown
8What we know about rehabilitation
- Cognitive remediation has small-to-moderate
effects on neuropsychological performance,
symptom severity, and cognitive functioning, but
ecological validity is once again unknown - Supported employment (IPS) has large effect size
in increasing employment from under 20 to over
50 of participants, but is received by less than
1 of population - Unfortunately, employment also tends to be
part-time, job tenure averages lt 6 months, and
monthly earnings average only 122/month or
1,464/year - ACT significantly increases housing stability and
moderately improves symptoms and quality of life,
but is received by very few peopleas are most
evidence-based practices (less than 5 of
population)
9If this were all we knew, there would be ample
cause for pessimism and concern
- However, we know even more
10What we know about recovery
- Domains of functioning are only loosely linked
- There is a broad heterogeneity in outcome
- 45-65 of people with DSM-IV-TR psychosis
experience significant improvement over time,
many recovering fully - Unfortunately, people also will lose on the
average 25 years of life due to co-morbid medical
conditions and poor quality care (i.e., the
longer they live the better their chances at
recovery)
11An Intriguing Discrepancy
- Few people (5) benefit from the few effective
interventions we have, and the effects of these
interventions are only small to moderate. - Yet over half will experience partial to full
recovery over time, with only 15-25 experiencing
a deteriorating condition. - How are we to understand this?
?
12Guiding Questions
- How do people describe the roles of treatment
and rehabilitation? - First, how do they describe experiences of the
illness and its effects on their lives?
13A Model of Serious Mental Illness
Davidson, L. (2003). Living outside mental
illness. NY New York University Press.
14Cognitive Intrusions and Disruptions
Its like being sick. Its like being
nauseated or having a really bad headache and
youre trying to relate, but theres something
bothering you. Its a distraction, you know ...
Like if you have a headache or something, you can
relate, but theres always that pain, so youre
going to be thinking of that pain ... It was like
I was trying to relate and yet ... I was having
to struggle to make conversation or to
concentrate. My attention span was low and my
concentration was low. And I think thats a very
common problem with people who are mentally ill.
Their attention span and their concentration seem
to wax and wane and ... theyre not always
there... People take for granted that you just do
things. A person with mental illness, its
sometimes hard ... its like youre distracted,
you cant get involved because youre not sort of
all there.
15Ways of Making Sense Taming the Illness
- It took several years before I realized that
this is something you have to work with, and
really have a conscious relationship to, because
in the beginning I guess I thought that this is
sort of like breaking a leg. I thought it would
take two or three years and then it would pass
and it wasnt like that. It took some time for me
to realize that.
16Another look What is our role?
Neo-Kraepelinian models of illness
Hope
17Stigma, discrimination messages of hopelessness
Chronic mental patient to Contributing (but
invisible) citizen
Contributing person with psychiatric
disability to Contributing citizen visible
role model
Hope, determination encouraging support
18Where Psychiatry is TodayThe Beggars by Pieter
BRUEGEL, the Elder (1568)
19Social-Political Analogy
Deus ex Machina
Customary view
Resources ()
Developing Country
Political Freedoms Participation
Life?
Economic Growth
20But
- Not enough money has led to . . .
- Not enough economic growth . . .
- Political freedoms delayed indefinitely (and thus
denied)
21Sens Upside Down World
Reduce Unfreedoms
External Resources
Developing Country
Economic Growth
Increase Freedoms Participation
Internal Resources
22As Applied to Recovery
Deus ex Machina
Customary view
Treatment
Person with Mental Illness
Normality?
Life?
Reduce Symptoms
23But
- Not enough treatment has led to . . .
- (not enough compliance, etc.)
- Not yet normal enough
- Recovery delayed indefinitely
(and thus denied)
24Turning Psychiatry Upside Down
Reduce Stigma Discrimination
Treatment Supports
Person with Mental Illness
Recovery (meaningful life in the community)
Increase Agency Participation
Persons own resources
25Lessons learned (and to be applied)
- What people can do and be is more important than
what people can have - One group of people cannot develop another group
of people - Countries do not have to be rich first before
ensuring freedoms economic growth does not
stimulate freedom, but freedom does stimulate
economic growth - Free choice really does have to be free With
human beings there is an infinite variety in
normality or healthWinnicott
26Fundamental Distinction and Division of Labor
- Recovery is what the person with the mental
illness does to manage his or her condition and
reclaim his or her life. - Recovery-oriented care is what health care
providers offer in support of the persons own
efforts toward recovery and includes enhancing
the persons access to opportunities to learn how
to manage his or her condition and pursue his or
her own hopes, dreams, and aspirations (i.e., a
meaningful life in the community).
27Basic Recovery Tasks
- Making sense of the illness and learning how to
live with it - Maintaining/regaining hope and being determined
to have a life
28Maintaining Hope and Determination
- the hope of knowing that everything that is,
that I go through, would not continue the rest of
my life, that there would be an end of it and
just knowing that I knew that I could keep
going. - My desire to get better, maybe the good fortune
to finally realize that health is a precious
thing its a matter of will power, of believing
in myself, pushing myself.
29Basic Recovery Tasks
- Making sense of the illness and learning how to
live with it - Maintaining/regaining hope and being determined
to have a life - Belonging and acceptance
30Belonging and Acceptance
- Im nobody till somebody loves me. Thats the
way I look at it. - When I was going through my psychotic changes
she was always there for me. She never turned
her back on me. - I think riding the horse helped me ... It
relaxed me. And, well, I guess it made me feel
like the horse loved me. Spending time with the
horse, it felt like unconditional love... you
connect with the animal and with yourself and
youre outdoors and it does something to you.
Its hard to explain, but when you go home you
think, Wow, another lesson! Wow, Im getting
better!
31Basic Recovery Tasks
- Making sense of the illness and learning how to
live with it - Maintaining/regaining hope and being determined
to have a life - Belonging and acceptance
- Reciprocity and giving back
32Reciprocity and Giving Back
- It made me feel like I was being helpful and in
situations like that I dont think so much about
my illness. It kind of goes on the back burner
because sometimes I just think about my illness
and it seems like when Im helping somebody or
somebody says something nice to me ... as soon as
people say that, oh, you look good, things like
that, it makes me feel better about myself.
33Basic Recovery Tasks
- Making sense of the illness and learning how to
live with it - Maintaining/regaining hope and being determined
to have a life - Belonging and acceptance
- Reciprocity and giving back
- Involvement in meaningful activities
34Involvement in Meaningful Activities
- I could choose to be a nobody, a nothing, and
just say the hell with it, the hell with
everything, Im not going to deal with
anything. And there times when I feel like that.
And yet, Im part of the world, Im a human
being. And human beings usually kind of do things
together to help each other out ... And I want
to be part of that... If youre not part of the
world, its pretty miserable, pretty lonely. So I
think degree of involvement is important ...
involvement in some kind of activity. Hopefully
an activity which benefits somebody. That gives
me the sense that I have something to offer ...
thats all Im talking about.
35Basic Recovery Tasks
- Making sense of the illness and learning how to
live with it - Maintaining/regaining hope and being determined
to have a life - Belonging and acceptance
- Reciprocity and giving back
- Involvement in meaningful activities
- Having successes and pleasure
36Successes and Pleasure
- I said to myself one day youve got a couple
of extra bucks, so why dont you just try at
least to do some-thing that maybe you normally
wouldnt do. So I went and did something... I
actually did something different and I enjoyed
it! Then I found myself saying What can I do
tomorrow? And one thing led to another... If
you could bottle it, it would be the best
anti-depressant I could take... Its enabled me
to go out looking for a job so now I can get some
extra money. Getting used to having money and
learning ... the things I could do with that,
enabled me to want to go out again, to go out and
make more money, so I could spend more time with
my friends.
37Basic Recovery Tasks
- Making sense of the illness and learning how to
live with it - Maintaining/regaining hope and being determined
to have a life - Belonging and acceptance
- Reciprocity and giving back
- Involvement in meaningful activities
- Having successes and pleasure
- Reconstructing a life
38Reconstructing a life
- The whole story of my health was a very
difficult experience because I had to really
reconstruct myself as a person. - Before I was in recovery I felt I couldnt do
anything right. I constantly felt that I was
stupid and dumb and everything my father told me
But then I realize that Im not stupid and
Im not dumb, that I actually know quite a bit,
and that I have a lot of knowledge and that if it
wasnt for the knowledge that I have a lot of
people wouldnt have gotten, you know, a lot of
things
39Basic Recovery Tasks
- Making sense of the illness and learning how to
live with it - Maintaining/regaining hope and being determined
to have a life - Belonging and acceptance
- Reciprocity and giving back
- Involvement in meaningful activities
- Having successes and pleasure
- Reconstructing a life
- Coming back normal
40Coming back normal
- There are problems but I think no matter what
situation you get into theres going to be
problems, no matter what. Youve got to learn to
work through problems because if you dont you
arent going to live thats a human being. In
order to get from one place to another youve got
to learn to get through the problems or around
the problems in order to get to the next step. - Recovery/being normal means having only
ordinary worries
41Some Paths to Life Outside of Psychosis
Increased community involvement
Enhanced sense of agency and belonging
Cognitive intrusions and disruptions
Successes and pleasure
Sense of belonging and hope
Life before illness
Decline in functioning
Demoralization and despair
Ways of making sense of intrusions and disruptions
Inside
Outside
Increasing withdrawal and isolation
Diminished sense of agency and increased
vulnerability
Delusions and other idiosyncratic ways of making
sense
Experiences of failure, stigma, and rejection
not cure
Neo-Kraepelinian models of illness
Davidson, L. (2003). Living outside mental
illness. NY New York University Press.
42So now what do we do?
- Offer evidence-based practices to those people
who will be likely to benefit from them and
assess their responsiveness. - Offer them in a person-centered fashion in
combination with clinical skill and within the
context of a collaborative relationship. - Appreciate the distinction between minimizing
illness and maximizing health and the need to
attend to both.
43Different Forms of Recovery
- Recovery from refers to eradicating the symptoms
and ameliorating the deficits caused by serious
mental illnesses. - Being in recovery refers to learning how to live
a safe, dignified, full, and self-determined life
in the face of the enduring disability which may,
at times, be associated with serious mental
illnesses.
44What if
- the processes and factors that contribute
to long-term recovery have little to do with the
processes and factors involved in learning how to
live with the illness? - our obsession with cure keeps us from
helping people to live quality lives here and
now, in between appointments, while waiting for
the medications to work, etc.
45If I cant tell my clients what to do, then what
do I do?
- Most people figure out how to live with the
illness. We could do a much better job supporting
them in those efforts through - offering information and education
- enhancing access to opportunities
- providing in vivo supports (as in supported
employment)
46Does it matter?
- Mental illnesses are highly disabling, and, as
recent reviews have emphasized, our science has
not come even close to being able to cure or
prevent them. Learning to live better in the face
of mental illness doesnt alter that reality. - -- Dickerson (2006)
Dickerson, F. (2006). Disquieting aspects of the
recovery paradigm. Psychiatric Services, 57647.
47- From the perspective of the person with the
disorder, Dickerson has it backward. It is
especially when the illness is most severe, and
because we do not yet have a cure, that people
who have these disabling disorders have no choice
but to live in the face of them. This is the
reality that takes priority in recovery-oriented
care. - -- Davidson, OConnell Tondora (2006)
Davidson, L., OConnell, M.J., Tondora, J.
(2006). In reply. Psychiatric Services,
571510-1511.
48Toward a Psychiatry of the Person (e.g., WPA)
rather than of the illness
- Someday, in the 21st century, after the human
genome and the human brain have been mapped,
someone may need to organize a reverse Marshall
plan so that the Europeans can save American
science by helping us figure out who really has
schizophrenia or what schizophrenia really is. - --Nancy Andreasen (1994)
Andreasen, N.C. (1994). Changing concepts of
schizophrenia and the ahistorical fallacy.
American Journal of Psychiatry, 1511405-1407.
49