Therapeutic Social Control of People with Serious Mental Illness: An Empirical Verification and Extension of Theory

被引:10
作者
Perry, Brea L. [1 ]
Frieh, Emma [1 ]
Wright, Eric R. [2 ]
机构
[1] Indiana Univ, Network Sci Inst, Bloomington, IN USA
[2] Georgia State Univ, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA
关键词
social control; gender; mental health consumers; RISK BEHAVIOR; HEALTH; WOMEN; DISORDER; COERCION; ASSOCIATION; SEXUALITY; DECISIONS; STIGMA;
D O I
10.1177/2156869317725891
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Mental health services and psychiatric professional values have shifted in the past several decades toward a model of client autonomy and informed consent, at least in principle. However, it is unclear how much has changed in practice, particularly in cases where client behavior poses ethical challenges for clinicians. Drawing on the case of clients' sexual behavior and contraception use, we examine whether sociological theories of soft coercion remain relevant (e.g., therapeutic social control; Horwitz 1982) in contemporary mental health treatment settings. Using structured interview data from 98 men and women with serious mental illness (SMI), we explore client experiences of choice, coercion, and the spaces that lie in between. Patterns in our data confirm Horwitz's (1982) theory of therapeutic social control but also suggest directions for updating and extending it. Specifically, we identify four strategies used to influence client behavior: coercion, enabling, education, and conciliation. We find that most clients' experiences reflect elements of ambiguous or limited autonomy, wherein compliance is achieved by invoking therapeutic goals. However, women with SMI disproportionately report experiencing intense persuasion and direct use or threat of force. We argue that it is critical to consider how ostensibly noncoercive and value-free interventions nonetheless reflect the goals and norms of dominant groups.
引用
收藏
页码:108 / 122
页数:15
相关论文
共 70 条
[1]  
Allen GE, 1997, GENETICA, V99, P77, DOI 10.1023/A:1018396529332
[2]  
Allen L, 2005, SEXUAL SUBJECTS: YOUNG PEOPLE, SEXUALITY AND EDUCATION, P1, DOI 10.1057/9780230500983
[3]   A ship upon a stormy sea: The medicalization of pregnancy [J].
Barker, KK .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 1998, 47 (08) :1067-1076
[4]  
BERG JW, 1996, PL S SOC CL, P169
[5]  
Black D., 1976, The behavior of law
[6]   Sexuality, fertility, and danger: Twentieth-century images of women with cognitive disabilities [J].
Block, P .
SEXUALITY AND DISABILITY, 2000, 18 (04) :239-254
[7]   Can paternalism be justified in mental health care? [J].
Breeze, J .
JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 1998, 28 (02) :260-265
[8]   Medical professionalism in the new millennium:: a physicians' charter [J].
Brennan, T ;
Blank, L ;
Cohen, J ;
Kimball, H ;
Smelser, N ;
Copeland, R ;
Lavizzo-Mourey, R ;
McDonald, W ;
Brenning, G ;
Davidson, C ;
Jaeger, P ;
Malliani, A ;
Muller, H ;
Sereni, D ;
Sutorius, E ;
Cruess, R ;
Cruess, S ;
Merino, J ;
Hernández, M .
LANCET, 2002, 359 (9305) :520-522
[9]  
Buckley PeterF., 1999, Sexuality and Serious Mental Illness, P1
[10]   Electroshock as a form of violence against women [J].
Burstow, B .
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN, 2006, 12 (04) :372-392