Title of article :
Negative pathways to psychiatric care and ethnicity: the bridge between social science and psychiatry
Author/Authors :
Craig Morgan، نويسنده , , Rosemarie Mallett، نويسنده , , Gerard Hutchinson، نويسنده , , Julian Leff، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
14
From page :
739
To page :
752
Abstract :
It has been consistently reported that the African-Caribbean population in the UK are more likely than their White counterparts to access psychiatric services via the police and under compulsion. The reasons for these differences are poorly understood. This paper comprises two main parts. The first provides a comprehensive review of research in this area, arguing the current lack of understanding stems from a number of methodological limitations that characterise the research to date. The issue of ethnic variations in pathways to psychiatric care has been studied almost exclusively within a medical epidemiological framework, and the potential insights offered by sociological and anthropological research in the fields of illness behaviour and health service use have been ignored. This has important implications as the failure of research to move beyond enumerating differences in sources of referral to psychiatric services and rates of compulsory admission means no recommendations for policy or service reform have been developed from the research. The second part of the paper sets out the foundations for future research, arguing that the pathway to care has to be studied as a social process subject to a wide range of influences, including the cultural context within which illness is experienced. It is further argued that Kleinmanʹs (Patients and healers in the context of culture: an exploration of the borderland between anthropology, medicine and psychiatry, University of California Press, Los Angeles, 1980) Health Care System model offers a particularly valuable preliminary framework for organising and interpreting future research. It is only through gaining a more qualitative understanding of the processes at work in shaping different responses to mental illness and interactions with mental health services that the patterns observed in quantitative studies can be fully understood. This further reflects the need for a bridge between the social sciences and psychiatry if services are to be developed to respond to the increasing diversity of modern societies.
Keywords :
Help-seeking , African-Caribbean , Psychiatric services , United Kingdom , Ethnicity research
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Record number :
601757
Link To Document :
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