I can’t fathom how a psychiatric diagnosis would ever be useful to anyone except as a tool to get accommodations or drugs. As far as understanding myself – who I am, why I act and think as I do – it contributes nothing.
I do understand what he means (see eg. previous post). As I said in response, I agree there is no value in the ‘one person, one disease’ view of psychiatric diagnosis. However, I worry that his critique goes too far and can only polarise debate and alienate mainstream psychiatry which does need to change its views about psychiatric diagnosis.
What needs to happen is that psychiatry should recognise psychiatric diagnosis for what it is rather than completely abandon it, as Justin would like. Diagnosis is justified as a means of communication. It is a way of trying to manage clinical complexity. But the boundaries of any diagnosis are fuzzy and there is no point of rarity between different syndromes. These are not absolute terms. Most psychiatric presentations are not natural kinds with an identifiable brain abnormality.
The problem is that it is too easy to assume a diagnostic concept is an entity of some kind, which then acts as a justification for treatment. In fact a psychiatric diagnosis is an unobservable, hypothetical construct. It is more an idealised description of those aspects of psychiatric presentation that are of interest. Diagnostic concepts are therefore justified by their clinical utility. Diagnosis is not only about identifying disease but also about the reasons for mental health problems.
Where psychiatry went wrong over recent years was in response to the so-called anti-psychiatry critique. In a way, Justin could be said to be resurrecting aspects of that critique. But psychiatry needs to move on from the polarisation between pro-psychiatry and anti-psychiatry. For example, Thomas Szasz became famous for his view that mental illness is a myth. He was correct that psychiatry has misled too many people that their mental health problems are due to their brain. Of course the brain mediates what we think, feel and do, including when we are mentally ill. But that does not mean necessarily that there is an underlying brain abnormality causing the problems. Szasz was right that the supposed brain disease behind functional mental illness is a myth. But Szasz wanted to go further by abandoning psychiatric diagnosis altogether because he did not think psychiatric detention could ever be justified.
Mainstream psychiatry’s response to so-called anti-psychiatry has merely reinforced its belief that functional mental illness is due to brain disease. It tends not to take a hardline position on this issue by saying that functional mental illness is completely caused by brain abnormality. However, it wants to say that there must be brain abnormality as a factor in most psychiatric presentations. This is not necessarily the case. It’s wrong to reduce people to their brains. Personal and social explanations of why we do what we do can improve our understanding of the reasons for our actions but cannot provide a complete causal explanation, certainly not in biological terms.
As I keep saying, too many people are being misled by psychiatry that their mental health problems are due to their brain (see eg. previous post). This includes misleading children who are being given a neurodivergent diagnosis to justify their sense of difference from others. This blog is called “Thinking differently about mental health”. Being different does not necessarily need to be justified by a psychiatric diagnosis. I know the neurodivergence movement does not want to pathologise a neurodivergent diagnosis. But overvaluing the diagnosis, including implying that any personal difference is due to brain differences, is not really helping children, including people in general. Here Justin does have a point. Psychiatry needs to undo the way in which it is itself benefitting from encouraging a psychiatric label as “the answer” to people’s mental health problems.
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