Yankovskyy Shelly
Valdosta State University
Transcult Psychiatry. 2016 Oct;53(5):612-29. doi: 10.1177/1363461516660900. Epub 2016 Jul 28.
This article examines contemporary Ukrainian psychiatry through the voices of patients, practitioners, and advocates, focusing on shifting objects of knowledge, interventions, and institutional transitions. Currently, we are witnessing the reconfiguration of psychiatry on a global scale through neoliberal rhetoric combined with the call for global mental health. The goal of the movement for global mental health is to scale up psychiatric treatments through greater access to psychiatric drugs, justified through the framing of distress as an illness. Neoliberal rhetoric suggests that cutting social service expenditure through the privatization and decentralization of the health care system will stimulate economic growth and, in the long term, combat poverty. This paper traces how these dynamics are playing out in Ukraine, drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted at a psychiatric hospital in south-central Ukraine from 2008-2010, while working with a non-governmental organization.
本文通过患者、从业者和倡导者的声音审视当代乌克兰精神病学,重点关注知识对象的转变、干预措施以及机构转型。当前,我们正目睹精神病学在全球范围内通过新自由主义言论以及全球心理健康呼吁进行重新配置。全球心理健康运动的目标是通过更广泛地获取精神科药物来扩大精神科治疗规模,将痛苦界定为疾病以此作为依据。新自由主义言论表明,通过医疗保健系统的私有化和权力下放削减社会服务支出将刺激经济增长,并从长远来看消除贫困。本文借鉴2008年至2010年在乌克兰中南部一家精神病院开展的人种志田野调查,同时与一个非政府组织合作,追溯这些动态在乌克兰是如何呈现的。