The movement for global mental health : critical views from South and Southeast Asia / edited by William Sax and Claudia Lang.
Material type: TextSeries: Social studies in Asian medicinePublisher: Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, [2021]Description: 1 online resource (i, 346 pages)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9789048550135
- 9048550130
- Mental health -- Cross-cultural studies
- Mental illness -- Cross-cultural studies
- Mental health -- South Asia
- Mental health -- Southeast Asia
- Mental illness -- South Asia
- Mental illness -- Southeast Asia
- Psychiatry
- Cultural pluralism
- Cultural Diversity
- Santé mentale -- Études transculturelles
- Maladies mentales -- Études transculturelles
- Santé mentale -- Asie méridionale
- Santé mentale -- Asie du Sud-Est
- Maladies mentales -- Asie méridionale
- Maladies mentales -- Asie du Sud-Est
- Diversité culturelle
- MEDICAL -- Alternative Medicine
- Zuidoost-Azië
- geestelijke gezondheidszorg
- Cultural pluralism
- Mental health
- Mental illness
- Psychiatry
- South Asia
- Southeast Asia
- 362.2 23
- 362.1 23
- RA790.5 .M69 2021
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electronic-Books | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
In this volume, prominent anthropologists, public health physicians, and psychiatrists respond sympathetically but critically to the Movement for Global Mental Health (MGMH), which seeks to export psychiatry throughout the world. They question some of its fundamental assumptions: the idea that "mental disorders" can clearly be identified; that they are primarily of biological origin; that the world is currently facing an "epidemic" of them; that the most appropriate treatments for them normally involve psycho-pharmaceutical drugs; and that local or indigenous therapies are of little interest or importance for treating them. Instead, the contributors argue that labeling mental suffering as "illness" or "disorder" is often highly problematic; that the countries of South and Southeast Asia have abundant, though non- psychiatric, resources for dealing with it; that its causes are often social and biographical; and that many non-pharmacological therapies are effective for dealing with it. In short, they advocate a thoroughgoing mental health pluralism. Bron: Flaptekst, uitgeversinformatie
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on May 07, 2021).
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- List of Tables -- 1 Global Mental Health -- Critical Histories -- 2 Mental Ills for All -- 3 Schizoid Balinese? -- 4 Misdiagnosis -- The Limits of Global Mental Health -- 5 Jinns and the Proletarian Mumin Subject -- 6 Psychedelic Therapy -- Alternatives -- 7 The House of Love and the Mental Hospital -- 8 Ayurvedic Psychiatry and the Moral Physiology of Depression in Kerala -- 9 Global Mental Therapy -- Afterwords -- 10 Global Mental Health -- 11 "Treatment" and Why We Need Alternatives -- Index
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