Literature DB >> 29627933

Care Wounds: Precarious Vulnerability and the Potential of Exposure.

Lauren Cubellis1.   

Abstract

What does it mean to offer care when the act of caring is wounding to its giver? For peer specialists-individuals with lived experience as patients in the psychiatric system-this question shapes how they use their own histories to provide support for individuals experiencing psychiatric crisis. Peer support is unique in the way it draws on empathetic resonance and depends on carefully deployed vulnerability; where one connects with others through the recognition of shared experience and mutual hurt. For peers, care works when this guidance, reassurance, and "being with"-all of which draw upon their own stories of traumatic history and variegated suffering-mitigate the present crisis being experienced by another. Drawing on twenty-eight months of fieldwork with a peer-staffed crisis respite center in the eastern United States, I argue that the peer specialist becomes the embodiment of a novel intersection of intimacy and compensation; one that poses vulnerability not as a consequence, casualty, or risk factor in the commodification of care, but as its principle vector of resonance and the assumption on which it is based. For peers, care that works-in that it creates a mutual resonance for the recipient-becomes simultaneously care that wounds its giver.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Care; Homelessness; Mental health; Peer support; Precarity

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29627933     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-018-9577-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  18 in total

1.  Symptoms of another life: time, possibility, and domestic relations in Chile's credit economy.

Authors:  Clara Han
Journal:  Cult Anthropol       Date:  2011

2.  Back from the edge of existence: a critical anthropology of trauma.

Authors:  Rebecca Lester
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2013-10

3.  Serenity: Violence, Inequality, and Recovery on the Edge of Mexico City.

Authors:  Angela Garcia
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2015-05-14

4.  Recovery stories: An anthropological exploration of moral agency in stories of mental health recovery.

Authors:  Neely Anne Laurenzo Myers
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2016-08

5.  The cybernetics of "self": a theory of alcoholism.

Authors:  G Bateson
Journal:  Psychiatry       Date:  1971-02       Impact factor: 2.458

6.  From ex-patient alternatives to consumer options: consequences of consumerism for psychiatric consumers and the ex-patient movement.

Authors:  A H McLean
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 1.663

7.  Embodying recovery: a qualitative study of peer work in a consumer-run service setting.

Authors:  Elizabeth Austin; Aditi Ramakrishnan; Kim Hopper
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  2014-01-24

8.  Breaking the circuit of social control: lessons in public psychiatry from Italy and Franco Basaglia.

Authors:  N Scheper-Hughes; A M Lovell
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 9.  Community, Public Policy, and Recovery from Mental Illness: Emerging Research and Initiatives.

Authors:  Enrico G Castillo; Bowen Chung; Elizabeth Bromley; Sheryl H Kataoka; Joel T Braslow; Susan M Essock; Alexander S Young; Jared M Greenberg; Jeanne Miranda; Lisa B Dixon; Kenneth B Wells
Journal:  Harv Rev Psychiatry       Date:  2018 Mar/Apr       Impact factor: 3.732

10.  Local responses to trauma: symptom, affect, and healing.

Authors:  Devon E Hinton; Laurence J Kirmayer
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2013-10
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  1 in total

Review 1.  [Homelessness and mental illnesses].

Authors:  S Schreiter; S Gutwinski; W Rössler
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2020-11       Impact factor: 1.214

  1 in total

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