Section of Psychiatric Epidemiology, Institute of Psychiatry School of Medicine, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Human Rights Centre Pablo Gonzales Olalla (Centro de Direitos Humanos Pablo Gonzales Olalla), São Paulo, Brazil.
Int Rev Psychiatry. 2022 Feb;34(1):78-88. doi: 10.1080/09540261.2022.2027349. Epub 2022 Feb 23.
Urban mental health studies traditionally search for causal relationships between elements of the city and the prevalence of mental disorders. This paper discusses the importance of (re)thinking the 'lived urban experience' from the perspective of city residents about how the immediate environment affects their mental health and how people cope with inequalities. A participatory-action research was implemented in a peripheral area of São Paulo - Brazil, in which volunteers from the territory made phone calls to neighbours to provide emotional support during the COVID-19 pandemic. Weekly supervision meetings were held between volunteers and researchers to discuss the experiences shared by community counterparts. Narratives have shown that the lived experience in the city is mediated by multiple layers of 'urban insecurities'. These difficulties pressured people to organise and resist in face of pervasive inequalities as well as to respond to unfolding experiences of social suffering. We highlight the potential of participatory methodologies to observe the ways in which subjects face their structural issues and the suffering that emerge in these circumstances. The understanding of how these conflicts are lived at a subjective level can support studies that are wondering about the mechanisms of how social conflicts 'get under the skin'.
城市心理健康研究传统上寻找城市元素与精神障碍患病率之间的因果关系。本文从城市居民的角度讨论了重新思考“城市生活体验”的重要性,即城市居民如何看待直接环境对其心理健康的影响,以及人们如何应对不平等。在巴西圣保罗的一个边缘地区实施了一项参与式行动研究,该地区的志愿者通过电话向邻居提供情感支持,以应对 COVID-19 大流行。志愿者和研究人员每周举行监督会议,讨论社区对应方分享的经验。叙述表明,城市生活体验受到多层“城市不安全”的影响。这些困难迫使人们在普遍存在的不平等面前组织和抵抗,并应对不断出现的社会苦难经历。我们强调了参与式方法的潜力,以观察主体面对其结构性问题以及在这些情况下出现的苦难的方式。理解这些冲突如何在主观层面上被体验,可以支持那些研究社会冲突如何“深入内心”的机制的研究。