Mainstream psychiatry emphasises controlling symptoms by taking medications. This approach ignores the role of context in shaping illness experiences and how people engage with mental health professionals. The focus on symptom control and medication management also narrows the function of the psychiatrist. This editorial argues that knowledge of patients' lives is important for providing empathic care that is oriented to the outcomes that matter to patients. In addition, care that attends to the person-in-context motivates and sustains mental health providers by putting meaning back into medicine. Truly patient-centred care demands pushing back against the reductionism of contemporary psychiatry to thoughtfully engage with the complexities of patients' lives.
CITATION STYLE
Carpenter-Song, E. (2015, August 4). Putting meaning into medicine: Why context matters in psychiatry. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045796015000475
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