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E-grāmata: Medicine over Mind: Mental Health Practice in the Biomedical Era

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In an era in which the medicalization of mental health troubles and treatment has been settled for several decades, little is known about how this biomedical framework affects practitioners’ experiences. This book explores how practitioners make sense of a field that has shifted rapidly in just a few decades.

We live in an era in which medicalization—the process of conceptualizing and treating a wide range of human experiences as medical problems in need of medical treatment—of mental health troubles has been settled for several decades. Yet little is known about how this biomedical framework affects practitioners’ experiences. Using interviews with forty-three practitioners in the New York City area, this book offers insight into how the medical model maintains its dominant role in mental health treatment. Smith explores how practitioners grapple with available treatment models, and make sense of a field that has shifted rapidly in just a few decades. This is a book about practitioners working in a medicalized field; for some practitioners this is a straightforward and relatively tension-free existence while for others, who believe in and practice in-depth talk therapy, the biomedical perspective is much more challenging and causes personal and professional strains.
 

Recenzijas

"Dena Smith provides us with an analysis of the medicalization of mental disorder, and its impact on the conceptions and treatments in psychiatry. Basing her work on 43 interviews with mental health professionals, Smith provides new insights on the role of medicalized perspectives on psychiatric work."  Peter Conrad, Brandeis University "This is a compelling project. Too often sociologists assume that the blueprint laid out by the DSM is equivalent to practice. This colors our discussions of medicalization in general, perhaps leading us to overstate its reach and breadth and obscuring the ways it is negotiated in practice. By delving more deeply into these practices and the reasoning behind them Smith's research has great potential to bring nuance to the discussion of medicalization. The book wants to go beneath our general discussions of medicalization to see how it plays out in practice. Through a comparison of three groups of clinicians, she reveals the distinct dilemmas clinicians face, as well as their responses to the prevailing paradigm in practice. These play out in often unanticipated ways."    Owen Whooley, author of Knowledge in the Time of Cholera: The Struggle over American Medicine in the Nineteenth Ce "Highly recommended." Choice

Introduction: Under the Influence of the Biomedical Model 1(13)
Chapter 1 From Meaning Making to Medicalization
14(24)
Chapter 2 Practitioner Portraits and Pathways to Practice
38(25)
Chapter 3 The Promise of "Imperfect Communication" and the "Prison" of Rigid Categorization: The DSM in Practice
63(32)
Chapter 4 Etiological Considerations and the Tools of the Trade: The Role of Medication and Talk Therapy in Practice
95(38)
Chapter 5 The Consequences of the Biomedical Model for Practice and Practitioners: Psychodynamic Therapy in a Biomedical World
133(32)
Conclusion: The Dangling Conversation---Ambiguity in Mental Health Practice 165(20)
Appendix: Notes on the Method and Sample 185(8)
Acknowledgments 193(4)
Notes 197(4)
References 201(6)
Index 207
DENA T. SMITH is an assistant professor of sociology at The University of MarylandBaltimore County where she teaches the sociology of mental health and illness, and medical sociology.