By now, it shouldn’t be news.
Today’s psychiatry is mostly about writing prescriptions. Psychiatrists
conduct short interviews, make diagnoses and prescribe medication.
Insurance companies might not be entirely to blame, but
since they pay psychiatrists more for conducting short sessions and medicating
their patients than for having extended conversations they are certainly part
of the problem.
When it comes to hospitalized psychiatric patients, insurance
companies apparently dictate the length of patient stay. The quicker the
patient is discharged, the better it is for the insurance company. The best way
to effect this result is through medication.
But, it is also fair to note that in the old days
psychiatric patients used to be hospitalized for very long periods of time. Extended hospital stays entail their own risks.
If it’s all old news, why did The Atlantic just run an
article bemoaning the state of modern psychiatry?
Your guess is as good as mine.
Be that as it may, here is how Sarah Mourra defines the state of modern
psychiatry:
In many
places psychiatry has become a biological enterprise, with some psychiatrists
even introducing themselves as "psychopharmacologists." In no other specialty
does a physician define themselves by the medication that they use. As one of
my psychiatry professors once commented, "I have never met an oncologist
who says "I'm an onco-pharmacologist." Increasingly, we are convinced
that medications are what make patients better -- and that if only they would
stay on them, if only they would take them as we have prescribed them, if only
they were on the right one or the right dose -- they would get better.
The new methods reduce the patient to brain chemistry,
thereby occluding his or her humanity.
Psychiatrists know well enough, for example, that getting a
job can be therapeutic, even for a schizophrenic. They also know that a human
connection between patient and psychiatrist is highly beneficial.
In Mourra’s words:
In
reality the process of getting better is much more complicated. Medications can
play a large role, but other factors are enormously important -- environment,
sense of purpose and meaning, the person's perception of their illness, and
their relationship with the people who treat them. Studies have shown that
patients taking placebo who have a good relationship with their psychiatrist have better outcomes than
patients taking the active drug who do not have that strong personal
connection. In the outpatient setting, a well-trained psychiatrist will follow
what's called the biopsychosocial treatment model -- which values the
biological, psychological, and social aspects of a person in considering their
treatment -- and consider these other parts of the patient's healing process,
in addition to medication.
Mourra does not suggest returning to the good old days,
because the old days were not all that good. When psychoanalysis ruled the day its
practitioners were offering the “talking cure.” Yet, the “talking cure” did not
involve conversation.
With the patient lying on a couch, looking away from his
analyst, babbling at the walls… conversation was not happening. Strictly
Freudian psychoanalysis forbade a human connection.
Psychiatrists who were not psychoanalysts did as today’s
psychiatrists do. They conducted intake interviews. These interviews might have lasted
longer than they do today but they tended to be limited to a series of
questions off of a checklist.
It is true that insurance companies influence the way
psychiatry is practiced, how many psychiatrists know how to conduct a
conversation and to make a connection with a human patient?
If the reign of the insurance companies ended tomorrow more
than a few psychiatrists would still keep doing what they are doing. It’s what they
know how to do; it’s what they were trained to do. They simply do not know how
to converse with their patients.
Mourra and the psychiatrists she cites are also correct to
say that the profession needs to take more account of each patient’s social
being. But again, how many of them have the requisite skills and experience to
do so?
The relational frame of reference for most psychotherapy
either involves the autonomous human mind or else the patient’s immediate
family. How many psychiatrists can guide a patient through a difficult moral
dilemma involving friends and colleagues? How many of them can do so without
mistaking the problem for another version of a family romance or reducing it to a
developmental glitch?
No comments:
Post a Comment