A diagnosis of conflict: theoretical barriers to integration in mental health services & their philosophical undercurrents.

Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine : PEHM
Nathan M Gerard

Abstract

This paper examines the philosophical substructure to the theoretical conflicts that permeate contemporary mental health care in the UK. Theoretical conflicts are treated here as those that arise among practitioners holding divergent theoretical orientations towards the phenomena being treated. Such conflicts, although steeped in history, have become revitalized by recent attempts at integrating mental health services that have forced diversely trained practitioners to work collaboratively together, often under one roof. Part I of this paper examines how the history of these conflicts can be understood as a tension between, on the one hand, the medical model and its use by the dominant profession of psychiatry, and on the other, those alternative models and practitioners in some way differentiated from the medical model camp. Examples will be given from recent policy and research to highlight the prevalence of this tension in contemporary practice. Part II of this paper explores the deeper commonalities that lay beneath the theoretical conflict outlined in Part I. These commonalities will be shown to be apart of a captivating framework that has continued to grip the conflict since its inception. By exposing this underlying fram...Continue Reading

References

Sep 1, 1982·Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry·M Lock
Apr 29, 2000·Journal of Medical Ethics·S M Reindal
Oct 31, 2001·Psychiatric Services : a Journal of the American Psychiatric Association·F J FreseS Vogel-Scibilia
Oct 25, 2006·Health & Social Care in the Community·L CestariP Huxley

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Citations

Nov 11, 2010·Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine : PEHM·James Giordano
Jan 17, 2012·Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine : PEHM·Sabina AlamJames Giordano
Mar 25, 2019·Health Care Analysis : HCA : Journal of Health Philosophy and Policy·Nathan Gerard

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