Family Life and Social Medicine: Discourses and Discontents Surrounding Puebla’s Psychiatric Care

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Abstract

Drawing on clinical data from 15 months of on-site participant observation in the only public psychiatric hospital in the state of Puebla, Mexico, this article advances our understanding of globalization in relation to psychiatry. I challenge the construction of psychiatry as only treating the individual patient and provide grounded doctor-patient-family member interaction in a Mexican psychiatric clinic in order to review what happens when doctors cannot interact with patients as atomized individuals even though in theory they are trained to think of patients that way. Challenged by severe structural constraints and bolstered by lessons from other nations’ efforts at deinstitutionalization, psychiatrists in Puebla push to keep patients out of the inpatient wards and in their respective communities. To this end, psychiatrists call upon co-present kin who are identified both as the customer and part of the caretaking system outside the clinic. This modification to the visit structure changes the dynamic and content of clinical visits while doctors seamlessly respond to unspoken beliefs and values that are central to local life, ultimately showing that efforts to define a “global psychiatry” informed by global policy will fail because it cannot exist in a uniform way—interpersonal interaction and personal experience matters.

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APA

Hale, K. L. (2017). Family Life and Social Medicine: Discourses and Discontents Surrounding Puebla’s Psychiatric Care. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 41(4), 499–540. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11013-017-9539-6

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