Literature DB >> 11933407

Lessons from history: the politics of psychiatry in the USSR.

I Spencer1.   

Abstract

The political-economic base of society affects every aspect of it, including nursing and psychiatry. This can be demonstrated by making a historical analysis of societies with different political-economic systems. Psychiatry in the USSR took a different form to psychiatry in the West. Differences included the diagnostic categories used and treatments employed. This can be investigated by examining accounts of clinical practice. Soviet psychiatry was also used for the systematic incarceration of political dissidents. Some commentators have drawn on the Soviet experience and used it to support an argument that psychiatry operates as a form of social control in the West as well as the USSR. This article shows how psychiatric abuse in the USSR was a historically specific response to a particular situation. Therefore some of the conclusions about Western psychiatry extrapolated from the Soviet experience are unsupportable. Whatever the role of psychiatry in the West, its mechanism is qualitatively different to that which existed in the USSR. In order to understand why Soviet medical workers were co-opted into the conscious abuse of psychiatry, it is essential to understand the specific nature of the USSR. This does not necessarily allow generalizations about Western psychiatry to be made from the Soviet experience. As psychiatric nurses, we can also learn from a particularly tragic period of psychiatry's history.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11933407     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2850.2000.00297.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychiatr Ment Health Nurs        ISSN: 1351-0126            Impact factor:   2.952


  3 in total

1.  Public attitudes toward psychiatric treatment. An international comparison.

Authors:  Matthias C Angermeyer; Peter Breier; Sandra Dietrich; Denis Kenzine; Herbert Matschinger
Journal:  Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol       Date:  2005-10-12       Impact factor: 4.328

2.  The association of schizophrenia with split personality is not an ubiquitous phenomenon: results from population studies in Russia and Germany.

Authors:  Georg Schomerus; Denis Kenzin; Julia Borsche; Herbert Matschinger; Matthias C Angermeyer
Journal:  Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol       Date:  2007-07-27       Impact factor: 4.328

3.  Proposed declassification of disease categories related to sexual orientation in the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-11).

Authors:  Susan D Cochran; Jack Drescher; Eszter Kismödi; Alain Giami; Claudia García-Moreno; Elham Atalla; Adele Marais; Elisabeth Meloni Vieira; Geoffrey M Reed
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2014-06-17       Impact factor: 9.408

  3 in total

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