Wolch J, Philo C
Department of Geography, University of Southern California, 90089-0255, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0255, USA.
Health Place. 2000 Sep;6(3):137-57. doi: 10.1016/s1353-8292(00)00019-8.
This paper reviews research in mental health geography that has examined landscapes of deinstitutionalisation, community care and everyday social life. It complements Philo's (1997, Across the water: reviewing geographical studies of asylums and other mental health facilities. Health and Place 3, 73-89) review of geographical studies concerned with asylums and other mental health facilities. Offering an interpretation of developments in this research sub-field, it charts a 'first wave' and a 'second wave' of inquiries, identifying shifts of substantive emphasis, theoretical approach and methodological practice. The gains and drawbacks of both 'waves' are discussed, with particular attention to absences both in what is researched and in the extent of political and policy engagement. The possible contours of a 'third wave' mental health geography, building on the strengths of earlier research but addressing new questions in new ways, are outlined in conclusion.
本文回顾了心理健康地理学领域的研究,这些研究探讨了去机构化、社区护理和日常社会生活的景观。它补充了菲洛(1997年,《隔岸相望:审视关于精神病院及其他心理健康设施的地理学研究》,《健康与场所》第3卷,第73 - 89页)对关注精神病院及其他心理健康设施的地理学研究的综述。本文对这一研究子领域的发展进行了解读,勾勒出了“第一波”和“第二波”研究,识别了在实质重点、理论方法和方法论实践方面的转变。文中讨论了两“波”研究的优缺点,特别关注了研究内容中的缺失以及政治和政策参与的程度。结论部分概述了“第三波”心理健康地理学可能的轮廓,它基于早期研究的优势,但以新的方式解决新的问题。