Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W4321360782> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 56 of
56
with 100 items per page.
- W4321360782 endingPage "168" @default.
- W4321360782 startingPage "161" @default.
- W4321360782 abstract "From Aftermath Psychiatry to Lattermath Psychiatry, or from Deinstitutionalisation to Community-Centric Mental Health Services, and now to Mental Health Care Ecosystems: Beyond Symbols, Stereotypes, and Stigma of Home Visiting and Assertive Community Teams1 Alan Rosen (bio) What does the evolution of architecture have to do with the deinstitutionalisation of psychiatry and the evolution of community mental health services? And how do these trajectories relate to the quest to destigmatise mental health services so they will be more approachable earlier by individuals and families in need of them? The arguments advanced by Terry Smith in The Architecture of Aftermath suggests that a) worldwide, there is not only an economy but an icon-omy, and b) global architecture has been reeling from the destruction of global icons such as the World Trade Centre in New York on 11 September 2001.2 There should be a growing discomfort among entrepreneurs, developers, and architects that their construction of iconic buildings to promote national or global perpetual brands, symbols, or empires has been transformed in the public mind into building impermanent ‘soft targets’, vulnerable to terrorism. Smith argues that architecture has lost its way from its roots in creating homes and communities for all.3 Similarly, psychiatry may also have lost its way in the eyes of the public, the face of the market, and from the loss of its iconic massive institutions. Meanwhile, it had been long in retreat from engaging with whole communities to improve their wellbeing and mental health, and by neglecting to promote full membership of the community and full human rights while controlling the lives of people contending with severe mental disabilities. Instead, psychiatry has continued to build clinical edifices, fortress hospitals, and academic empires, with overreliance on medications, long-acting injections, ECT (electro-convulsive therapy), indefinite incarcerations, involuntary control, (arguably) captive fodder for research of variable worth, alienation, abuse, and neglect. These have become its dominant, stigmatising, and ultimately dysfunctional public symbols and icons. More recently, Terry Smith has also invoked a related concept: the ‘lattermath’, a late fifteenth-century term for new shoots of grass growing after [End Page 161] a harvest, or mowing, so we are not perpetually entrapped in the leftovers of aftermath, as it can lead to new life, new growth and new hope.4 That this may help us to make the case that a renewal of hope for psychiatry, especially via shifting its balance towards a familiar home context or a community centre of gravity, is imaginable.5 I have described the progression from deinstitutionalisation to ‘aftermath’ psychiatry consisting of clinical edifices, fortress hospitals, and academic empires with only occasional outreach, to a more hopeful ‘lattermath’ of new shoots of growth for a more hopeful, community-centric rights-based psychiatry with ‘in-reach’ to hospitals if, and when, necessary. Our mental health professions do not have to be left perpetually trapped in the rubble and debris of our old practices and approaches. Instead, it can be demonstrated that, if examined closely, there is ‘lattermath’ growth occurring in psychiatry leading to new life, new growth, and new hope for the profession. The public and wider community has usually welcomed most phases of development of community psychiatry, from pastoral home visits to crisis intervention and service delivery systems of evidence-based complex integrated community mental health care like assertive community treatment (see Table 1). These approaches, if properly applied, can confer much more respect and may diminish the power differential considerably. Communities have been disappointed when they have been withdrawn due to backlash from more institutionalised professionals or politicians.6 Can psychiatry revive itself through a new growth of practice innovation and evidence-based community mental health services for all, situated in the complexities and contexts of their own lives, and ‘on their own turf and terms’, often in their own homes, on their own streets? Can community psychiatry encompass both the necessary technical interventions and service delivery systems, while also facilitating human rights, humane relationships, more benign meanings, and purposes fostering healing, recovery, and communal wellbeing? If we do not learn better to integrate these needs, our future in psychiatry will continue to be like trying to tie together architectural gestures and..." @default.
- W4321360782 created "2023-02-20" @default.
- W4321360782 creator A5052558611 @default.
- W4321360782 date "2022-01-01" @default.
- W4321360782 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W4321360782 title "From Aftermath Psychiatry to Lattermath Psychiatry, or from Deinstitutionalisation to Community-Centric Mental Health Services, and now to Mental Health Care Ecosystems: Beyond Symbols, Stereotypes, and Stigma of Home Visiting and Assertive Community Teams" @default.
- W4321360782 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/hah.2022.0023" @default.
- W4321360782 hasPublicationYear "2022" @default.
- W4321360782 type Work @default.
- W4321360782 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W4321360782 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W4321360782 hasAuthorship W4321360782A5052558611 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C118552586 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C123657996 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C134362201 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C153349607 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C159110408 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C168285401 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C2776674806 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C2777113529 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C118552586 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C123657996 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C134362201 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C142362112 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C144024400 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C153349607 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C15744967 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C159110408 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C168285401 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C2776674806 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C2777113529 @default.
- W4321360782 hasConceptScore W4321360782C71924100 @default.
- W4321360782 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W4321360782 hasLocation W43213607821 @default.
- W4321360782 hasOpenAccess W4321360782 @default.
- W4321360782 hasPrimaryLocation W43213607821 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W2002354474 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W2014329832 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W2072129860 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W2098309872 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W2396776161 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W2769119187 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W3007623901 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W4235110370 @default.
- W4321360782 hasRelatedWork W4295940501 @default.
- W4321360782 hasVolume "24" @default.
- W4321360782 isParatext "false" @default.
- W4321360782 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W4321360782 workType "article" @default.