The excellent Daran Leader, who wrote “Why Do People Get Ill?”, has written in the Guardian about the current state of Mental Health Services. Many of his points and conclusions are applicable across the board into the whole of the Health Service, not just “Mental Health”.
Mental health services become like a garage where people are fixed and put back on the road, rather than subjects to be listened to. But once we start listening we might well question our beliefs and prejudices about normality. As old psychiatry recognised, many of the phenomena that are seen to define mental illness are in fact efforts to battle against it. A delusion, for instance, may provide a meaning to one’s world, and to try to remove it may deprive the person of a crucial resource.
Listening is a crucial part of health care, which is sadly, all too frequently absent. The “restitution narrative” of quick fix, sort out the broken or troublesome part, reigns supreme. Yet illness remains an intensively personal, subjective experience, different in every circumstance, and understood only in terms of the patient’s values and beliefs.
Bhugra is right that more therapy must become available, but there must be diversity. At present therapies that mimic drugs in their aims clear the field: promising swift outcomes, localised intervention and precise targets, they use the very language of drugs. Yet they all too often buy into a discourse of normality and rehabilitation that ignores the specificity of the patient – and their ways of making sense of their situation. Mental health services need to learn more from patients, questioning the values of efficiency and autonomy fetishised by contemporary society.
Trying to fit individuals into protocols created around cohorts and averages reduces the subject to an object. We need diversity in health care, because, really, one size does not fit all.
Daran rightly highlights how the drug model is sweeping the field of alternative approaches to therapy and care, no doubt because of the vast marketing resources poured into the promotion of drugs and the manipulation of the “evidence base”. But Medicine should never have been reduced the prescribing of drugs, or to treatments which can demonstrate their drug-like abilities.
We’ve lost our way.
Phil Hanlon suggests a way forward out of the existing malaise , a vision for a better way to live and in terms of medicine a new inclusive paradigm based on Plato’s tennants – truth,ethics and beauty. The videos are inspiring.
http://www.afternow.co.uk/