Care as disability justice, dignity in mental health, Pg8
Reimagining mental healthcare: Prioritizing dignity, disability justice, and addressing social determinants for equitable and inclusive support systems.
The article highlights the need to reimagine mental health care as a pursuit of dignity and disability justice, emphasizing equity, inclusion, and diversity.
It critiques dominant approaches to psychosocial disability that focus on integration into communities with stereotypical understandings of productive living.
The piece emphasizes addressing material and relational deprivation as both a cause and outcome of mental ill health, citing NCRB data on suicides in India.
The article advocates for comprehensive care that considers biological, psychological, social, cultural, political, and historical explanations for distress.
It calls for a shift in focus from treatment to understanding what a person needs to live the life they want, recognizing diverse ways of understanding and responding to distress.
The piece stresses the importance of building trust through honest collaborations, dialogic practice, and acceptance of non-linear outcomes in mental health care.
Detailed Insights:
The dominant approaches to psychosocial disability often view experiences through a deficits lens, focusing on integration into communities that may not be inclusive or equitable.
Mental health-care access gaps remain significant globally, ranging from 70% to 90%, indicating a critical need for reimagining care systems.
Sustained material and relational deprivation are significant factors contributing to mental ill health, often resulting in a range of losses for individuals.
Multiple explanations for distress, including biological, psychological, social, cultural, political, and historical factors, should be considered simultaneously for comprehensive care.
Disability justice embodies the spirit of liberation and wholeness, moving beyond mere integration into an unequal world, and focusing on relational justice.
Building trust in mental health services involves honest collaborations, dialogic practice, and acceptance of non-linear outcomes, addressing disillusionment and disengagement.
Transforming mental health education involves preparing individuals to navigate the complexity of a person’s social world and remain open to diverse approaches.
Recognizing and compensating those with lived experience as practitioners can bring community wisdom and contextual understanding to mental health care.
Key Concepts Involved:
Psychosocial Disability: A disability that arises from the interaction of social, psychological, and biological factors.
Disability Justice: A framework that examines disability and ableism as it intersects with other forms of oppression and identity.
Relational Justice: An approach that emphasizes the importance of relationships and social connections in achieving justice and well-being.