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      The quest for choice and the need for relational care in mental health work

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          Abstract

          Since the revolutionary mood of the 1960s, patient-centered mental health care and a research emphasis on service users as experts by experience have emerged hand in hand with a view of service users as consumers. What happens to knowledge derived from firsthand experience when mental health users become experts and actively choose care? What kind of perspective do service users pursue on psychological distress? These are important questions in a field where psychiatric expertise on mental illness is socially structured and constrained as an intra-personal disturbance of the mind. We argue that experience experts have lost a coherent perspective on care and health. We illustrate this by rationally reconstructing how the interpersonal view of mental health first gained and then lost coherence between the conception of mental health, the practice of mental health care, and the user experience. Harry Stack Sullivan’s interpersonal theory was a paradigm case for such coherence. The inclusion of mental health consumers as ‘experts by experience’ in the mental health field took place at the cost of Sullivan’s coherent interpersonal theory. Service users who interact side by side with medical experts as experience experts are constrained by the evidence-based imperative and consumerism. Service users are caught up in a race among experts to gain knowledge about mental problems from a third-person perspective instead of from first-person experience. To make a contribution service users have more to gain from a research approach that appreciates that they are persons among persons rather than experts among experts.

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          Lifeworld-led healthcare is more than patient-led care: an existential view of well-being.

          In this paper we offer an appreciation and critique of patient-led care as expressed in current policy and practice. We argue that current patient-led approaches hinder a focus on a deeper understanding of what patient-led care could be. Our critique focuses on how the consumerist/citizenship emphasis in current patient-led care obscures attention from a more fundamental challenge to conceptualise an alternative philosophically informed framework from where care can be led. We thus present an alternative interpretation of patient-led care that we call 'lifeworld-led care', and argue that such lifeworld-led care is more than the general understanding of patient-led care. Although the philosophical roots of our alternative conceptualisation are not new, we believe that it is timely to re-consider some of the implications of these perspectives within current discourses of patient-centred policies and practice. The conceptualisation of lifeworld-led care that we develop includes an articulation of three dimensions: a philosophy of the person, a view of well-being and not just illness, and a philosophy of care that is consistent with this. We conclude that the existential view of well-being that we offer is pivotal to lifeworld-led care in that it provides a direction for care and practice that is intrinsically and positively health focused in its broadest and most substantial sense.
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            Governing the soul: The shaping of the private self

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              The Social Construction of What?

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +47-35-575451 , +47-35-575401 , borge.baklien@hit.no
                rob.bongaardt@hit.no
                Journal
                Med Health Care Philos
                Med Health Care Philos
                Medicine, Health Care, and Philosophy
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                1386-7423
                1572-8633
                24 April 2014
                24 April 2014
                2014
                : 17
                : 4
                : 625-632
                Affiliations
                Faculty of Health Studies, Telemark University College, Box 203, 3901 Porsgrunn, Norway
                Article
                9563
                10.1007/s11019-014-9563-z
                4182652
                24760340
                16f472c5-bd0f-4b25-8d30-1973d20afa3b
                © The Author(s) 2014

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.

                History
                Categories
                Scientific Contribution
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2014

                Medicine
                anti-psychiatry,consumers,r.d. laing,logic of care,relational health,service users,h.s. sullivan,survivors,t. szasz

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