Showing posts with label hearing voices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hearing voices. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 January 2025

Epistemic Justice in Mental Healthcare

This week we announce the publication of an edited collection which is entirely open access: Epistemic Justice in Mental Healthcare: Recognising agency and promoting virtues across the lifespan (Palgrave 2024), edited by myself, Lisa Bortolotti. The book is an output of project EPIC, featuring eight new chapters exploring epistemic justice in mental health. 


Epistemic Justice in Mental Healthcare

In the Preface (downloadable here), Matthew Broome and I frame the discussion as a way to affirm the role of the mental health patient as a person, an agent, and a collaborator. When we are mental health patients, we are persons because we are more than our health or our diagnosis, we have needs and interests that matter and that affect the way in which our health impacts our lives. 

We are also agents, because despite the vulnerabilities of our status as patients, we have a perspective that matters and the capacity to contribute to positive change. Crucially to the success of clinical encounters, we are partners in the project of addressing our health issues. We can collaborate with healthcare professionals by sharing our experiences and participating in decision making.

Chapter 1, Being understood: epistemic injustice towards young people seeking support for their mental health, is authored by Michael Larkin with members of the Agency Projects team including lived experience researchers from McPin. It addresses some of the factors that make clinical interactions unsuccessful, offering some suggestions for improving clinical communication. The focus is on ensuring that young people are understood and supported at times of crisis, that they are not blamed for the difficulties they face, and that they are not reduced to a diagnostic label.

Chapter 2, Challenging stereotypes about young people who hear voices, is authored by myself, Lisa Bortolotti, Kathleen Murphy-Hollis, Fiona Malpass, and young people from the Voice Collective. It highlights three stereotypes associated with voice hearing that have harmful consequences for young people's relationships and opportunities to thrive, in the family, the school, and the clinic. These are incompetence, dangerousness, and diversity leading to exclusion. The chapter illustrates the impact of these stereotypes based on the young people's experiences, and encourages further empirical research in this area.

Chapter 3, Reacting to demoralization and investigating the experience of dignity in psychosis: reflections from an acute psychiatric ward, authored by a team led by Martino Belvederi Murri, addresses the unique challenges to epistemic justice that emerge in an acute ward, where coercion may be used. The use of coercion may engender situations that are detrimental for individual dignity and morale. One such effect is demoralization, which may increase the risk of suicide. The chapter provides an overview of the work on these topics and offers some suggestions for strategies that might improve the experience of psychiatric inpatient care.

Chapter 4, Not all diagnosis are created equal: Comparing depression and borderline personality disorder diagnoses through the lens of epistemic injustice, authored by Jay Watts, examines four aspects of epistemic injustice: objectification, moral agency, trivialization, and narrative agency. It compares personality disorder and depression, arguably the least and most popular diagnoses with patients in psychiatry. The analysis emphasises the importance of epistemic injustice as a tool in critically evaluating the usefulness of specific psychiatric diagnoses, encouraging a shift in clinical training to embrace reflective practices and restructure power dynamics in clinical encounters. 

Chapter 5, Resisting perceptions of patient untrustworthiness, authored by Eleanor Palafox-Harris, argues that a beneficial therapeutic relationship between patient and clinician requires mutual trust. In order to effectively treat someone, a clinician has to trust the patient’s reports of their symptoms but many psychiatric diagnoses are stereotypically associated with traits that indicate untrustworthiness (such as irrationality). In this chapter Palafox-Harris illustrates how psychiatric labels can signal stereotypes of untrustworthiness, reducing patients' perceived epistemic credibility.

Chapter 6, Preserving dignity and epistemic justice in palliative care for patients with serious mental health problems, with Luigi Grassi as lead author, considers the challenges faced by people with serious mental disorders who are at the end of life and promotes a person-centred approach, which can increase the sense of personal dignity and epistemic justice. Dignity Therapy can be applied in palliative care settings, offering people an opportunity to reflect upon crucial existential and relational issues and prepare their legacy.

Chapter 7, Promoting good living and social health in dementia, with Rabih Chattat as lead author, explores the notion of good living in the case of dementia and highlights the role of social health in preserving wellbeing. Discrimination impacts people with dementia in diagnosis disclosure, advance care planning, and decision making. The chapter critically examines the labelling of the behaviour of people with dementia as problematic and pathological even when it is a reaction to difficulties in communication.

Chapter 8, Ameliorating epistemic injustice with digital health technologies, authored by Elisabetta Lalumera, discusses the potential of digital phenotyping for ameliorating epistemic injustice in mental health. There is a concern that the evidence digital health technologies gather may overshadow individual experiences but, through a fictional case study, Lalumera portrays digital phenotyping as way to support shared decision-making. 

The book aims to help understand how the demands of epistemic justice relate to and complement recent research on agency in youth mental health, person-centred care, dignity therapy, stigmatising diagnoses, good living, social health, and access to digital technologies. As illustrated in the figure below, people seeking help should preserve crucial roles as agents and collaborators with valuable perspectives, multiple interests and needs, the capacity to contribute to positive change, and the capacity for shared decision making.


The mental health patient as an agent


Wednesday, 1 May 2024

Stereotypes about young people who hear voices

Negative stereotypes associated with people who report unusual experiences and beliefs cause lasting harm and often undermine agency. In a series of workshops with the young people of the Voice Collective, facilitated by Fiona Malpass (Mind in Camden) and designed by Lisa Bortolotti and Kathleen Murphy-Hollis, we discussed the challenges that hearing voices poses for young people, at home, at school, and in healthcare settings.

The result of our conversations was a script created by the young people who participated in the workshops, where they described three forms of negative stereotyping that cause harm: 

  • perceived dangerousness, leading to the thought that the young person poses a threat; 
  • perceived lack of capacity or incompetence, leading to the thought that the young people cannot achieve anything valuable or challenging; 
  • perceived difference or weakness, leading to social exclusion.
The script was turned into an animated video, produced by Squideo (click below to watch).



Snake or dangerousness


Snake


Perceived dangerousness is represented by Snake, who does not really pose a threat to humans but is feared and kept at a distance. Contrary to popular belief, most snakes are neither venomous nor dangerous. Snakes defend themselves if someone disturbs or attacks them but are not aggressive towards humans. Yet, many people make assumptions about their being dangerous. So, Snake in the video is right that his bad reputation is undeserved.


Butterfly or incompetence



Butterfly


Perceived lack of capacity is represented by Butterfly. Although she is an active pollinator contributing to the life of the garden, Bee teases her and suggests that she is lazy and useless, based on her past as a caterpillar, when she was seen eating all day long. Seeing a chewed leaf might make us think that caterpillars are good for nothing but destroying plants. However, caterpillars are actually very important to their environment even before they become pollinators. They prevent vegetation from growing too quickly and depleting nutrients in the soil. So Bee's attitude towards caterpillars and butterflies in our video is unjustified.


Wolf or exclusion



Wolf


Perceived difference or weakness is represented by Wolf. Wolf got an injury and because of that he was left behind by his pack. The other wolves assumed he would be a burden, unable to keep up and hunt for himself. But there is no reason that his small, temporary injury would have made his contributions to the pack less valuable in the long term. He would have probably needed some support until the injury was healed, and then he would have been in a position to run and hunt as fast as the other members of the pack.


A safe space


Snake, Wolf and Butterfly in the clearing


Being treated as dangerous for no good reason, being considered as a burden and nothing else, and being excluded by shared decision-making, are all harmful (and sadly common) experiences for young people who hear voices. Young people struggling with their mental health have a lot to contribute and with some support they can continue to pursue the projects that are important to them.

In the video, Snake, Wolf and Butterfly meet in the clearing to share their experiences and support each other. What happens in the clearing, sharing experiences in an environment that is safe and non-judgemental, is what happens in the Voice Collective. Young people who hear voices and have other unusual experiences or beliefs come together and connect with people who are in a similar situation. 

The video is an invitation to go beyond the stereotypes and see the person, not the label. To learn more about myths and truths about hearing voices, visit The Voice Collective website.




You find The Wolf, the Snake and the Butterfly and other animated videos introducing philosophical issues in The Philosophy Garden, a virtual philosophy museum gathering and producing resources for young people, educators, and the general public. 


The Philosophy Garden is a project run by EPIC co-investigator Lisa Bortolotti, with the collaboration of Kathleen Murphy-Hollies, Anna Ichino, and Fer Zambra.