Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 8 de 8
Filter
1.
2.
Sociol Health Illn ; 42(8): e1-e3, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33247849

Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Pandemics , Humans , SARS-CoV-2
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31658699

ABSTRACT

There has been growing acknowledgment among scholars, prison staff and policy-makers that gender-informed thinking should feed into penal policy but must be implemented holistically if gains are to be made in reducing trauma, saving lives, ensuring emotional wellbeing and promoting desistance from crime. This means that not only healthcare services and psychology programmes must be sensitive to individuals' trauma histories but that the architecture and design of prisons should also be sympathetic, facilitating and encouraging trauma-informed and trauma-sensitive practices within. This article problematises the Trauma-Informed Care and Practice (TICP) initiatives recently rolled out across the female prison estate, arguing that attempts to introduce trauma-sensitive services in establishments that are replete with hostile architecture, overt security paraphernalia, and dilapidated fixtures and fittings is futile. Using examples from healthcare and custodial settings, the article puts forward suggestions for prison commissioners, planners and architects which we believe will have novel implications for prison planning and penal practice in the UK and beyond.


Subject(s)
Prisoners/psychology , Prisons , Psychological Trauma , Female , Humans , Mental Health
4.
Med Sci Law ; 59(2): 95-103, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30982426

ABSTRACT

This research was conducted in response to governmental and public concern regarding the escalating use of section 136 of the Mental Health Act (1983) nationally and of the excessive use of police custody as a place of safety in Sussex in particular. A retrospective analysis of all detentions in Sussex during 2012 was combined with qualitative data from 37 people with lived experience of detention, as well as police, National Health Service (NHS) and allied staff and volunteers. Predominantly, police used s136 as suicide prevention (80%) when no other services or help were available. During the period of study (2013-2016), effective joint working strategies, such as the street triage pilot, were able to reduce the overall rates of s136 detentions and to increase access to NHS place of safety suites markedly. Although the research acknowledges idiosyncratic local factors which contribute to the high rate of detentions across Sussex, the results have wider implications for national policy and practice.


Subject(s)
Mental Health Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Mentally Ill Persons/statistics & numerical data , Police , Prisoners/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Alcoholic Intoxication/epidemiology , Cooperative Behavior , Emergencies , England , Female , Health Services Accessibility/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Young Adult , Suicide Prevention
6.
Sociol Health Illn ; 35(3): 377-90, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22897482

ABSTRACT

The diagnosis of depression in the clinical context is extremely controversial and is subject to criticism of over-medicalisation and pharmaceuticalisation. Depression can be conceptualised across the entire spectrum of lay and medical belief, from the 'normal' highs and lows of the human condition to its inclusion in the dominant Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders classificatory system, as a form of serious mental illness. In this context, a better understanding of how people describe, experience, negotiate and participate in the process of diagnosis is needed. This article draws on qualitative interviews to explore lay accounts of being diagnosed with depression. The findings reveal that lay accounts of depression vacillate in and out of the medicalised discourse of depression, highlighting the limitations of the biomedical approach to diagnosis and treatment.


Subject(s)
Depression/diagnosis , Depression/psychology , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Medicalization , Adult , Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Australia/epidemiology , Depression/drug therapy , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Physicians, Primary Care/psychology
7.
Health (London) ; 14(6): 653-68, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20974697

ABSTRACT

Women's perspectives on breast screening (mammography and breast awareness) were explored in interviews with midlife women sampled for diversity of background and health experience. Attending mammography screening was considered a social obligation despite women's fears and experiences of discomfort. Women gave considerable legitimacy to mammography visualizations of the breast, and the expert interpretation of these. In comparison, women lacked confidence in breast awareness practices, directly comparing their sensory capabilities with those of the mammogram, although mammography screening did not substitute breast awareness in a straightforward way. The authors argue that reliance on visualizing technology may create a fragmented sense of the body, separating the at risk breast from embodied experience.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/diagnosis , Mass Screening , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Patients/psychology , Breast Neoplasms/psychology , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Mammography
8.
Curr Opin Psychiatry ; 23(6): 546-9, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20733495

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To review recent literature around the controversial diagnosis of personality disorder, and to assess the ethical aspects of its status as a medical disorder. RECENT FINDINGS: The diagnostic currency of personality disorder as a psychiatric/medical disorder has a longstanding history of ethical and social challenges through critiques of the medicalization of deviance. More recently controversies by reflexive physicians around the inclusion of the category in the forthcoming revisions of International Classification of Diseases and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders classifications reflect the problems of value-laden criteria, with the diagnostic category being severely challenged from within psychiatry as well as from without. SUMMARY: The clinical diagnostic criteria for extremely value-laden psychiatric conditions such as personality disorder need to be analyzed through the lens of values-based medicine, as well as through clinical evidence, as the propensity for political and sociolegal appropriation of the categories can render their clinical and diagnostic value meaningless.


Subject(s)
Personality Disorders/diagnosis , Psychiatry/ethics , Antisocial Personality Disorder/diagnosis , Antisocial Personality Disorder/psychology , Dangerous Behavior , Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Humans , Personality Disorders/psychology , Self-Injurious Behavior/diagnosis , Self-Injurious Behavior/psychology , Social Values
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...