Literature DB >> 2637674

Psychiatry: mindless or brainless, both or neither?

Z J Lipowski1.   

Abstract

After a period marked by one-sided emphasis on psychodynamics and social issues, or what could be called "brainless" psychiatry on account of its relative neglect of cerebral processes, we are witnessing an opposite trend towards extreme biologism or "mindless" psychiatry. The pendulum has swung periodically from one to the other of these reductionistic positions throughout the history of psychiatry. The author argues that neither brainless nor mindless psychiatry can do justice to the complexity of mental illness and to the treatment of patients. Psychiatry's distinguishing feature as a clinical discipline is its equal concern with subjective experience, or the mind, and with the body, including brain function, which together constitute a person, a psychiatrist's proper focus of inquiry and intervention. Moreover, a person, viewed as a mindbody complex, is in constant interaction with the environment. It follows that both study of mental illness and clinical practice need to take into account the psychological, the biological and the social aspects. These three aspects are not mutually reducible and are indispensable for the understanding and treatment of the individual patient. Such a comprehensive, biopsychosocial approach provides an antithesis to the reductionistic viewpoints and, in the writer's opinion, is both practically and theoretically most satisfying.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1989        PMID: 2637674     DOI: 10.1177/070674378903400318

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0706-7437            Impact factor:   4.356


  7 in total

1.  Are psychiatrists an endangered species? Observations on internal and external challenges to the profession.

Authors:  Heinz Katschnig
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 49.548

2.  What is a balanced program?

Authors:  P C Mohl
Journal:  Acad Psychiatry       Date:  1995-06

3.  The relevance of the philosophical 'mind-body problem' for the status of psychosomatic medicine: a conceptual analysis of the biopsychosocial model.

Authors:  Lukas Van Oudenhove; Stefaan Cuypers
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2014-05

4.  Taking the long view: an emerging framework for translational psychiatric science.

Authors:  Kenneth W M Fulford; Lisa Bortolotti; Matthew Broome
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 49.548

Review 5.  Pediatric bipolar disorder in an era of "mindless psychiatry".

Authors:  Peter I Parry; Edmund C Levin
Journal:  J Trauma Dissociation       Date:  2012

6.  Biologism in Psychiatry: A Young Man's Experience of Being Diagnosed with "Pediatric Bipolar Disorder".

Authors:  Peter Parry
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2014-03-28       Impact factor: 4.241

7.  Eugen Bleuler's schizophrenia--a modern perspective.

Authors:  Anke Maatz; Paul Hoff; Jules Angst
Journal:  Dialogues Clin Neurosci       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 5.986

  7 in total

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