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在(全球)精神卫生中概念化文化:来自一个美国城市印第安人行为健康诊所的经验教训。

Conceptualizing culture in (global) mental health: Lessons from an urban American Indian behavioral health clinic.

机构信息

School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington, Bothell, WA, USA.

School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2022 May;301:114899. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114899. Epub 2022 Mar 12.

Abstract

The movement for global mental health (GMH) has brought perennial questions about human diversity in mental health to the fore through heightened debates over if and how established knowledge, institutions, and practices should be altered for ethical and effective interventions with diverse peoples around the world. Kirmayer and Pedersen (2014) encouraged dialogue between GMH scholars and communities considered for intervention to address differences and concerns about colonialism. American Indian mental health offers an instructive site for global mental health inquiry to understand frameworks that might facilitate this desired dialogue. Here, we draw from a clinical ethnography in urban American Indian behavioral health conducted between September 2014 and February 2015 to glean insights into a popular response to these differences: Incorporating Indigenous cultural forms into clinical practice. Our findings highlight a predicament this response presents to mental health professionals. They can either eschew their clinical training and its cultural assumptions to take up new lives enabling their representation of Indigenous cultural forms, or they can hold onto their professional training and modify what is clinically familiar to appear culturally different. Rather than a purposeful decision, in the clinic contextual factors-tacit assumptions, clinic structures, and popular culture concepts-powerfully shaped clinical practice and reconfigured Indigenous cultural forms to support familiar clinical processes (e.g., treatment-planning). Although potentially therapeutic, culturally repackaged mental health practices are not the therapeutic alternatives called for by many Indigenous communities, and when advertised as such, risk harmful appropriations and misleading reticent people into participating in culturally prescriptive interventions. Lessons for global mental health point away from incorporating Indigenous cultural forms into clinical practice, which is likely to result in cultural repackaging, toward ethnographically-informed dialogue of differences to inform models for medical and epistemic pluralism providing interested communities more culturally commensurate mental health services alongside well-supported Indigenous therapeutic alternatives.

摘要

全球心理健康运动(GMH)通过激烈的辩论,将有关心理健康人类多样性的长期问题提上了日程,这些辩论涉及到既定的知识、机构和实践是否以及如何为世界各地不同人群的伦理和有效干预而改变。Kirmayer 和 Pedersen(2014)鼓励 GMH 学者与将要进行干预的社区进行对话,以解决有关殖民主义的差异和关切。美国印第安人心理健康为全球心理健康研究提供了一个有益的场所,以了解可能促进这一期望对话的框架。在这里,我们从 2014 年 9 月至 2015 年 2 月在城市美国印第安人行为健康方面进行的临床民族志中汲取见解,以了解对这些差异的一种流行反应:将本土文化形式纳入临床实践。我们的研究结果突出了这种反应对心理健康专业人员提出的困境。他们要么摒弃他们的临床培训及其文化假设,接受新的生活,使他们能够代表本土文化形式,要么坚持他们的专业培训,修改临床上熟悉的内容,使其看起来具有文化差异。在诊所中,情境因素——隐性假设、诊所结构和流行文化概念——而不是有意的决策,有力地塑造了临床实践,并重新配置了本土文化形式,以支持熟悉的临床过程(例如,治疗计划)。虽然可能具有治疗作用,但重新包装的文化心理健康实践并不是许多土著社区所呼吁的治疗替代方法,而且当作为这样的治疗方法宣传时,存在着有害的挪用和误导人们参与文化规定性干预的风险。对全球心理健康的教训是,不要将本土文化形式纳入临床实践,这很可能导致文化重新包装,而是要进行民族志知情的差异对话,为医学和认识论多元主义模式提供信息,为感兴趣的社区提供更符合文化的心理健康服务,同时支持得到充分支持的土著治疗替代方法。

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