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Psychiatric Name Calling: Is it Helpful?

psychiatry3Today I offer a follow-up to my earlier post titled “Name Calling by Psychiatrists: Is it Time to Put a Stop to it?” Among the points that I had tried to make is that psychiatrists falsely claim that the names they use to describe patients are “diagnoses.”  In actuality, all that they do is convert someone’s expressed concerns into medical jargon.

I received a great deal of positive and negative comments about the post from readers, but my focus today is on the negative ones. Most of them argue that in contrast to my position, they had personally found their psychiatric diagnosis very helpful.

Those who Found the Psychiatric Pathologizing Helpful

straight talkingI just finished an excellent book on this topic by Lucy Johnstone titled, A Straight Talking Introduction to Psychiatric Diagnosis. There we find several quotes from people who received a so-called diagnosis from psychiatrists and spoke of its positive personal impact.  For example, some felt that it provided relief at knowing “what was wrong.”

I had something that I could firmly grasp, and, you know, I could find out more and try to resolve it…[I] felt relief that this whole jungle was going to be sorted out.

Another person wrote,

It gave me the comfort of explanation…. When I was told I was depressed it gave me a framework of understanding and a first grip on what was happening. 

Some felt that it gave them hope for treatment and support.

Illness meant treatment and the possibility of cure.

disorders

Acceptance of my illness was a turning point…. By accepting treatment I could actively seek the right medication, access support, and turn my life around.

I think I prefer my illness having a name because it makes me feel less lonely, and I know that there are other people experiencing my kind of misery.

Then there were those who felt it provided them freedom from blame and guilt.

Diagnosis implied that this was an illness and not my fault—important for someone whose depression has always been riddled with guilt.

Commentary

Although there are many, many people who feel this way, Ms. Johnstone points out that the relief that these people experience is based on their assumption that the diagnosis itself is valid. If it isn’t, they are simply being offered a circular explanation—“Why are my moods so up and down?” “Because you have bipolar disorder.” “How do you know I have bipolar disorder?” “Because your moods are so up and down.”

Keep in mind, as well, that these people came to view their so-called diagnosis as helpful without ever having an opportunity to compare the pathologizing approach to any alternative approaches. For example, what would be the reactions of these same people whom I have just quoted if they were provided an option that avoided simplistic, misleading terminology, while professional mental health providers and peer support groups assisted the person to find their own stories and provided a choice of treatment options?

motivationMoreover, finding freedom from blame and guilt by playing the blaming-the-brain game may not be anywhere as helpful as the pharmaceutical companies would have us believe. Many of us have learned that we all, from time to time, do things that violate our image of our ideal self and spend some time suffering the consequences.  We come to realize that we not only violated the image of the ideal self in the past, but we’ll no doubt do so again and again in the future.  The experience of suffering over these lapses is the spur that, after a period of difficult reflection, eventually gets us off our butts, learn new skills and seek out the type of support that moves us to make improvements.  It can take time for this to happen. It can take more time than we in our modern pressure pot world may feel we have any right to take, and our loved ones may lose their patience. However, in the long run, drugging these feelings away have always produced more harm than good.

Those who Found the Psychiatric Pathologizing Unhelpful

In contrast to those who tell of some positive reactions to psychiatric name calling, there are other people who tell a dramatically different story.

despair 2

For a number of years, I accepted the medical model as a framework of understanding…. But I gradually came to appreciate drawbacks to the framework. My reading suggested the model might not stand up scientifically…. By the time I was entering my second decade of service use, the medical model, which I had initially found reassuring, seemed increasingly unsatisfactory, without the capacity to encompass the complexity of my interior or exterior life and give it positive value. As a result, I began to actively explore frameworks that better met my needs.

despair 3I already knew something was wrong with me. Now I knew I was mad…. The diagnosis becomes a burden… you are an outcast in society…. It took me years to feel OK about myself again.  

My diagnosis label promoted despair and threatened to become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

I have been diagnosed with dysthymic disorder since I was thirteen.  One kind of harm I suffered from receiving a diagnosis, in and of itself, was that it seemed so final and despairing to receive as a teenager.  For me, having a diagnosis seemed so final.  Like it wasn’t just a tempory issue that I was having, adjustment or adolescence or something, but this disorder that I was going to have for the rest of my life no matter what I did.

But the worse part of this, which I have only been able to shake within the last year…is the defectiveness I felt.  Just kind of in some core way.  Like I’m totally different.

I was so offended. I was really offended.  I thought well, ‘F*** you! You’re attacking my personality; you’re attacking me.  You’re attacking the very soul of me, you know; who I am, and what I am, that’s a disorder.

I no longer identify with my previous role as a severely ill psychiatric patient but a human being that is experiencing and surviving life in my own unique way… just like every other human being on this planet.

Commentary

In her book, Ms. Johnstone summarizes what she has learned from these quotes:

Lucy Johnstone

Lucy Johnstone

It is understandable that service users, reaching desperately for an escape from anguish, confusion, guilt and blame, might see diagnosis (at least initially) as ‘salvation’.  However, these benefits may be bought at the high price of taking on profoundly destructive messages of defect, dangerousness, damage and despair. 

In my view, we can come up with a much better approach to the psychiatric pathologizing of people, an approach that doesn’t label anyone, but rather, classifies mental health concerns. For those who found the pathologizing approach helpful, this alternative approach would provide the professional and peer support that they value without misleading name calling. Psychiatric terms confuse questions of fact with questions of value, and superficially declare that a person’s experience is bad when it may have some pluses and minuses.

Undoubtedly, there are kind and decent folk who have a very different position than I on this subject. In no way do I mean to suggest that those who hold a different opinion are stupid, for I have met many who are as bright as a cloudless summer day. If they want to continue to use the DSM approach, it will continue to be available. All that I seek, all that I hope for, is that those who are uncomfortable with the DSM approach, can still assess mental health services using an alternative. All that I seek is that we all take some time to think more deeply about the nature of melancholy, sadness and tears.

———————

Some people will enjoy reading this blog by beginning with the first post and then moving forward to the next more recent one; then to the next one; and so on.  This permits readers to catch up on some ideas that were presented earlier and to move through all of the ideas in a systematic fashion to develop their emotional intelligence.  To begin at the very first post you can click HERE.

Women and Criticism
Providing Negative Criticism: The Newest Guidelines

About the Author

Jeffrey Rubin grew up in Brooklyn and received his PhD from the University of Minnesota. In his earlier life, he worked in clinical settings, schools, and a juvenile correctional facility. More recently, he authored three novels, A Hero Grows in Brooklyn, Fights in the Streets, Tears in the Sand, and Love, Sex, and Respect (information about these novels can be found at http://www.frominsultstorespect.com/novels/). Currently, he writes a blog titled “From Insults to Respect” that features suggestions for working through conflict, dealing with anger, and supporting respectful relationships.

14 Comments

  1. Marv Brilliant AA says:

    These patients made some interesting comments. Just because they feel more at ease with a terminology that induces some feeling of relief, I believe the belief is due to the power of suggestion. If given a placebo for these so called symptoms, would their comments strike the same tune as believing they received a correct diagnosis, in other words they may accept the fact that the placebo must be the correct drug to minimize the name attached to nothing more than a concern or human fallibility. Patients must be educated in alternative therapies or research updated statistics. Naturally all patients would not investigate this endeavor, but it would be a start.

  2. Hi Marv. Much thanks for your comment, and I like the way you are thinking about this.

    • B.L.Davies says:

      It would also help if some people didn’t claim that the physical condition myalgic encephalitis aka Chronic fatigue was a psychiatric conditon which can be treated by taliking therapy and excercise, when it has been proven to be a physical condition, with genetic causes and the exerise therapy exacerbates the condition and the talking therapy is only good in aiding people to come to terms with no loger having the energy to do what they would love to be able to do, wouldn’t you agree Dr Rubin ?

      • Dr. Jeffrey Rubin says:

        Hi B.L. Davies. I appreciate your question. Unfortunately I know too little about myalgic encephalitis to be of any help. I am please that you have had this forum to share you own concern about this issue. Wishing you well.

      • GARI j WORZALLA says:

        simple solution, don’t go to a psychologist for a condition you know is physical. Money is a prime motivator.

  3. […] soon followed with a post titled “Psychiatric Name Calling: Is it Helpful?”  Having thus raised some questions concerning the whole range of psychiatric labeling […]

  4. […] of interest, and the various comments led me to write several follow-up posts (see, here, here, here and here).  While all of this was going on, several people asked what I thought of the […]

  5. […] criticism about this type of name-calling from several different angles ((see here, here, here, here and here).  Today, we focus in on an additional problem with the pathologizing […]

  6. Mustafa Alsaedy says:

    If diagnosis are BS then Asperger Syndrome has (so far) relieved me of my previous intense suffering. I believe it is the opposit of ADHD.

  7. Barend says:

    I neeeeed to read this book !!
    The DSM is destroying my life !!
    I’m going to order it right now !!

    • Barend says:

      HO !
      Is this book gonna help me divert from the DSM or steer into the DSM ?
      Jeff ?
      Or should I just give up because there’s no such book available ?
      #confused…

      • Mustafa says:

        I read once that the secular and temporal, is rival with the spiritual. But they are supposedly closing up.

        I’m muslim and Allah says the most intelligent fear and worship Allah, but the stupid worship the false authority.

        • Barend says:

          My Muslim name is Abdullah and Allah lets me make decision what is stupid…

        • Barend says:

          But Mustafa it is easy to be right when you say stupid peoplel worship false authority… the word false implies that to worship it is stupid ; so that is like saying a rotten egg tastes bad and can make you sick which is right if its truly true…
          You see ?

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