Halpin Michael
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA
J Health Soc Behav. 2016 Jun;57(2):153-67. doi: 10.1177/0022146516645637.
How mental illnesses are defined has significant ramifications, given the substantial social and individual repercussions of these conditions. Using actor-network theory, I analyze how mental health professionals use the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) in their work. Drawing on observations of a neuropsychological laboratory and interviews with 27 professionals (i.e., psychiatrists, psychologists), I investigate how the DSM is used in research, clinical, and institutional work. In research, the DSM influences study design and exclusion/inclusion criteria. In the clinic, the DSM influences how disorders are conceptualized and diagnosed. Institutionally, the DSM aligns the patient-professional encounter to insurance and pharmaceutical interests. I conclude that the DSM operates as multiple, context-specific taxonomies that pervasively influence professional practices, such that all possible actions must orient to DSM criteria, with professionals both a source and an object of institutionalized gaze.
鉴于精神疾病所产生的重大社会和个人影响,其定义方式具有重要意义。运用行动者网络理论,我分析了心理健康专业人员在工作中如何使用《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》(DSM)。基于对一个神经心理学实验室的观察以及对27名专业人员(即精神科医生、心理学家)的访谈,我研究了DSM在研究、临床和机构工作中的使用情况。在研究中,DSM影响研究设计以及排除/纳入标准。在临床中,DSM影响对疾病的概念化和诊断方式。在机构层面,DSM使患者与专业人员的接触符合保险和制药行业的利益。我得出结论,DSM作为多种特定情境下的分类体系发挥作用,广泛影响专业实践,以至于所有可能的行动都必须以DSM标准为导向,专业人员既是制度化审视的源头,也是其对象。