"Hell no, they'll think you're mad as a hatter": Illness discourses and their implications for patients in mental health practice

被引:23
|
作者
Ringer, Agnes [1 ,2 ]
Holen, Mari [1 ]
机构
[1] Roskilde Univ, Dept Psychol & Educ Studies, Roskilde, Denmark
[2] Social Psychiat Serv, Prinsensvej 10, DK-4100 Ringsted, Denmark
来源
HEALTH | 2016年 / 20卷 / 02期
关键词
discourse analysis; ethnography; experiencing illness and narratives; mental health; post-structuralism; postmodernism; DIAGNOSIS;
D O I
10.1177/1363459315574115
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
This article examines how discourses on mental illness are negotiated in mental health practice and their implications for the subjective experiences of psychiatric patients. Based on a Foucauldian analysis of ethnographic data from two mental health institutions in Denmarkan outpatient clinic and an inpatient wardthis article identifies three discourses in the institutions: the instability discourse, the discourse of really ill, and the lack of insight discourse. This article indicates that patients were required to develop a finely tuned and precise sense of the discourses and ways to appear in front of professionals if they wished to have a say in their treatment. We suggest that the extent to which an individual patient was positioned as ill seemed to rely more on his or her ability to navigate the discourses and the psychiatric setting than on any objective diagnostic criteria. Thus, we argue that illness discourses in mental health practice are not just materialized as static biomedical understandings, but are complex and diverseand have implications for patients' possibilities to understand themselves and become understandable to professionals.
引用
收藏
页码:161 / 175
页数:15
相关论文
共 5 条
  • [1] 'Severe mental illness': Uses of this term in physical health support policy, primary care practice, and academic discourses in the United Kingdom
    Pina, Ilaria
    Gilfellon, Liam
    Webster, Sue
    Henderson, Emily J.
    Oliver, Emily J.
    SSM-MENTAL HEALTH, 2024, 5
  • [2] Relationships between caregiving stress, mental health and physical health in family caregivers of adult patients with cancer: implications for nursing practice
    Saimaldaher, Zahra'a H.
    Wazqar, Dhuha Y.
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF CARING SCIENCES, 2020, 34 (04) : 889 - 898
  • [3] Characteristics and clinical outcomes for mental health patients admitted to a behavioural assessment unit: Implications for model of care and practice
    Daniel, Catherine
    Mukaro, Violet
    Yap, Celene Y. L.
    Knott, Jonathan C.
    Kelly, Peter
    Innes, Andrew
    Braitberg, George
    Gerdtz, Marie
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2021, 30 (01) : 249 - 260
  • [4] 'I think it does just opens it up and horizontal ellipsis you're not hiding it anymore': Trainee clinical psychologists' experiences of self-disclosing mental health difficulties
    Turner, Kellie
    Moses, Jenny
    Neal, Adrian
    CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY & PSYCHOTHERAPY, 2022, 29 (02) : 733 - 743
  • [5] Demands on Health Information and Clinical Practice Guidelines for Patients from the Perspective of Adults with Mental Illness and Family Members: A Qualitative Study with In-Depth Interviews
    Schladitz, Katja
    Weitzel, Elena C.
    Loebner, Margrit
    Soltmann, Bettina
    Jessen, Frank
    Schmitt, Jochen
    Pfennig, Andrea
    Riedel-Heller, Steffi G.
    Guehne, Uta
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (21)