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De-Medicalizing Misery: Psychiatry, Psychology and the Human Condition
 
 
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De-Medicalizing Misery: Psychiatry, Psychology and the Human Condition [Paperback]

Professor Mark Rapley , Dr Joanna Moncrieff , Ms Jacqui Dillon
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De-Medicalizing Misery: Psychiatry, Psychology and the Human Condition + Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America + Doctoring the Mind: Why psychiatric treatments fail
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Product details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan (12 Oct 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0230307914
  • ISBN-13: 978-0230307919
  • Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 13.6 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 86,967 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Review

'Despite longstanding awareness of the limitations of the medical model when applied to difficulties of human behavior and adjustment, the fields of psychiatry and psychology continue to accede to the pressures of medicine and the drug industry in their conceptualization of these human realities. Ironically, however, this medical model, eager as it is to fit so much of people's experience into diagnostic categories, is a social construction. This book represents a significant effort to de-mystify, de-medicalize, and reclaim important aspects of the human condition.' -Kenneth D. Keith, Professor, Department of Psychological Sciences, University of San Diego, USA

'De-Medicalizing Misery has assembled an impressive cast of leading mental health experts. Together they challenge the simplistic and pessimistic biological model of human distress that has, with eager support from the pharmaceutical industry, dominated the mental health field for far too long. This evidence-based, humane and optimistic book not only explains where biological psychiatry went wrong, it spells out the alternatives.' - John Read, University of Auckland, New Zealand and Editor of 'Models of Madness'


'The psychiatrist or psychologist is expected to do something for every patient sitting in front of him or her, but how robust is the intellectual basis of psychiatric science when psychiatric 'diseases' are merely symptom clusters - clustered by us, not by nature? We are in indeed in the age of the medicalization of everyday life, when Lord Layard, economist and architect of the IAPT programme, can write in the BMJ that 'mental illness' has taken over from unemployment as our greatest social problem. But what is the test of 'mental illness'? In DeMedicalizing Misery the authors examine some of the domains lamentably absent from orthodox psychiatry and psychology training programmes, with their medical model focus, and in so doing raise the IQ of the whole debate. And not just for clinicians.' - Dr Derek Summerfield, Consultant Psychiatrist & Senior Lecturer, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London, UK.






Product Description

Thomas Szasz (1960) suggested that the myth of 'mental illness' functions to 'render more palatable the bitter pill of moral conflict in human relations'. The medicalization of distress enables the mental health professions to manage the human suffering that they are confronted with, and also the suspicion that there is little that they can do to help. But the medicalization of misery and madness renders people unable to comprehend their experiences in ordinary, meaningful terms. In this collection we restore to everyday discourse a way of understanding distress that, unlike contemporary psychiatry and psychology, recognises and respects the essential humanness of the human condition. De-medicalizing Misery is a shorthand term for this project. The book resists the psychiatrization and psychologization of human experience, and seeks to place what are essentially moral and political – not medical - matters back at the centre of our understanding of human suffering.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
As a person who has experienced, and observed in several others people, severe emotional/mental distress this book offers encouragement and inspiration to sufferers, carers and professionals alike as to how there is a need to de-emedicalise the very real causes which lead to acute levels of distress, it points us towards the political struggle required to work towards avoiding stigmatising diagnosis, prognosis and potentially harmful treatments.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Medicalizing Masculinity 11 Dec 2011
By Hu(man) - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The authors of this very recently published book on the medicalization of everyday life include the British child psychiatrist in the tradition of R.D. Laing, Sami Timimi. He writes, in Chapter 7 of the present volume, of the serious situation in which boys find themselves as they have been defined by mainstream psychiatry as defective children. Boys' enthusiasm has been demonized and their liveliness compromised by the forced administration of toxins (certain forms of amphetamines, for example, known in the States under the brand name Ritalin), often as a requirement for the boy to be able to return to school. Parents are usually not aware of what their children are being prescribed and feel guilty that their sons have been banished from school. School officials merely comply with the authority of the medical profession. Timimi's early work was reviewed in THYMOS: JOURNAL OF BOYHOOD STUDIES. What he has written is especially important on two counts: his clear understanding of the precarious situation of boys at the hands of mainstream psychiatry and psychopharmacology, and his debt to the work of R.D. Laing.
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