Literature DB >> 12113440

The paradoxical use of interpreting in psychiatry.

Gerard Drennan1, Leslie Swartz.   

Abstract

Changes in the official status of African languages in South Africa suggested an examination of the impact of multi-lingualism on the practice of institutional psychiatry. For a range of theoretical and institutional reasons, a 'language gap' between clinician and patient can be rendered irrelevant in terms of the routine production of psychiatric texts in which 'symptoms' are described and 'cases' are constructed. In contrast to the way in which the role of interpreting is obscured in some hospital settings, it is highlighted in forensic settings. Here the extent of the dependency of the clinician on the interpreter is made more visible. Through this ethnographic exploration of the institutional management of multi-lingualism, the status of 'the patient who requires interpreting' emerges as an institutional construct, being determined in large measure by the routines of institutional practice. The requirements of the institution that the patient move through the process of a hospital admission, and the different requirements of each stage of this process, inform the decision as to whether interpreting is necessary. Furthermore, the differing requirements of the members of the multi-disciplinary teams renders the status of 'the patient who requires interpreting' as variable and contested. Through this analysis the institutional management of multi-lingualism emerges as a site at which discourses of race in psychiatry are reproduced.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12113440     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(01)00153-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  12 in total

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6.  The invisibility of informal interpreting in mental health care in South Africa: notes towards a contextual understanding.

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Review 7.  THERACOM: a systematic review of the evidence base for interventions to improve Therapeutic Communications between black and minority ethnic populations and staff in specialist mental health services.

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8.  Reasons for inpatients not to seek clarity at Dr George Mukhari Academic Hospital, Pretoria.

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9.  Doing their best: strategies used by South African clinicians in working with psychiatric inpatients across a language barrier.

Authors:  Sanja Kilian; Leslie Swartz; Bonginkosi Chiliza
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10.  Language, culture, and task shifting--an emerging challenge for global mental health.

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Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2014-02-27       Impact factor: 2.640

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