Topor Alain, Boe Tore Dag, Larsen Inger Beate
Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
Faculty of Health and Sports Sciences, University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway.
Front Sociol. 2022 Apr 4;7:832201. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2022.832201. eCollection 2022.
From being a concept questioning the core of psychiatric knowledge and practice, recovery has been adopted as a guiding vison for mental health policy and practice by different local, national, and international organizations. The aim of this article is to contextualize the different understandings of recovery and its psychiatrization through the emergence of an individualizing and de-contextualized definition which have gained a dominant position. It ends with an attempt to formulate a new definition of recovery which integrates people in their social context. Research results from various follow-up studies showing the possibility of recovery from severe mental distress have stressed the importance of societal, social and relational factors as well of the person's own agency when facing their distress and reactions from their environment. These researches were published in the 1970s and 80s; a period of struggle for liberation from colonialism, of struggle by women and black people for their civil rights, and a time of de-institutionalization of services directed toward the poor, elderly, handicapped, prisoners, and people with mental health problems. Recovery research pointed at the central role of individuals in their recovery journey and it was understood as a personal process in a social context. However, with neo-liberal political agenda, the personal role of individuals and their own responsibility for their well-being was stressed, and contextual understandings and the role of social, material and cultural changes to promote recovery faded away. Thus, during recent decades recovery has been mostly defined as an individualistic journey of changing the persons and their perception of their situation, but not of changing this situation. Contextual aspects are almost absent. The most quoted definition accepts the limits posed by an illness-based model. This kind of definition might be a reason for the wide acceptance of a phenomenon that was initially experienced as a break with the bio-medical paradigm. Recently, this dominant individualized understanding of recovery has been criticized by service users, clinicians and researchers, making possible a redefinition of recovery as a social process in material and cultural contexts.
从一个质疑精神病学知识与实践核心的概念,康复已被不同的地方、国家和国际组织采纳为心理健康政策与实践的指导愿景。本文旨在通过出现一种占据主导地位的个体化且脱离背景的定义,来阐述对康复的不同理解及其精神病化。文章结尾尝试提出一个将人们融入其社会背景的康复新定义。各种随访研究的结果表明,从严重精神痛苦中康复是有可能的,这些研究强调了社会、社交和关系因素以及个人自身能动性在面对痛苦和来自环境的反应时的重要性。这些研究发表于20世纪70年代和80年代;那是一个摆脱殖民主义的斗争时期,妇女和黑人争取民权的斗争时期,以及针对穷人、老年人、残疾人、囚犯和有心理健康问题者的服务去机构化的时期。康复研究指出了个人在康复过程中的核心作用,并且它被理解为社会背景下的个人过程。然而,随着新自由主义政治议程的推进,强调了个人的个人角色及其对自身幸福的责任,而促进康复的背景理解以及社会、物质和文化变革的作用逐渐消失。因此,在最近几十年里,康复大多被定义为改变个人及其对自身状况认知的个人主义历程,而不是改变这种状况。背景因素几乎缺失。最常被引用的定义接受基于疾病模型所设定的限制。这种定义可能是一种现象被广泛接受的原因,而这种现象最初被视为与生物医学范式的决裂。最近,这种对康复的主导性个体化理解受到了服务使用者、临床医生和研究人员的批评,使得将康复重新定义为物质和文化背景下的社会过程成为可能。