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The contemporary legitimation crisis in psychiatry Alastair Morgan, Sheffield Hallam University
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Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Jan 19, 2016

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Page 1: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

The contemporary legitimation crisis in psychiatry

Alastair Morgan, Sheffield Hallam University

Page 2: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Legitimation Crisis“…traditions can retain legitimising force only

as long as they are not torn out of interpretive systems that guarantee continuity and identity”. Habermas, (1980:71).

Habermas J (1980) Legitimation Crisis, translated by Thomas McCarthy, London: Heinemann

Page 3: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Three areas for legitimation crisis - Cultural1). Tradition

A broad interpretive framework – a “way of seeing”.

Different historical constructions of tradition.Pluralist cultural tradition – psychoanalysis,

phenomenology, and psychiatry. Hybrid of understanding and explanation

The handing over of tradition – a mutual process of critique and preservation – this has ossified in contemporary psychiatry

Page 4: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

2). Paradigms – scientific questions of legitimation• Paradigms generate a set of problems,

questions and horizons for scientific practice.• Kraepelinian tradition of classifying discrete

mental illness syndromes ( often broad in nature) – Kraepelinian dichotomy

• Neo-Kraepelinian restoration of that tradition – attempts to exclude pluralism - DSM-III.

Page 5: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Klerman's neo-kraepelinian theses 1). Psychiatry is a branch of medicine. 2).Psychiatry should utilise modern scientific methodologies and base its practice on

scientific methodologies. 3). Psychiatry treats people who are sick and who require treatment for mental

illness 4). There is a boundary between the normal and the sick. 5). There are discrete mental illnesses. Mental illnesses are not myths. There is not

one but many mental illnesses. It is the task of scientific psychiatry, as of other medical specialities, to investigate the causes, diagnosis and treatment of these mental illnesses.

6). The focus of psychiatric physicians should be particularly on the biological aspects of mental illness.

7). There should be an explicit and intentional concern with diagnosis and classification.

8). Diagnostic criteria should be codified and a legitimate and valued are of research should be to validate them.

9). Statistical techniques should be used to improve reliability. Klerman G (1978). ‘ The evolution of a scientific nosology’, in Shershow, J (ed).

Schizophrenia: Science and Practice, Harvard: Harvard University Press.

Page 6: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

• Kraepelinian paradigm and neo- Kraepelinian restoration of the paradigm have both failed.

• Lack of validity and reliability.• Proliferation of mental illnesses.• Inadequacy of treatment, and paucity of new

treatments being developed.

Page 7: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

3). The problem of authority – political questions of legitimation• What is the legitimation of authority for

psychiatry ?• Expansion of coercive treatments, without an

evidence base for their efficacy.• Problems in justifying its own professional

position within medicine and beyond.

Page 8: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Research Agenda for DSM-V (2002) –an acceptance of failure“not one laboratory marker has been found to

be specific in identifying any of the DSM-defined syndromes”.

“extremely high rates of comorbidities”“high degree of short-term diagnostic

instability”“lack of treatment specificity is the rule

rather than the exception”Kupfer D, First M, Regier D (eds) (2002) A

research agenda for DSM-V, APA.

Page 9: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

A research agenda for DSM-V (2002) – awaiting the messiah“. . .reification of DSM-IV

entities to the point that they are considered to be equivalent to diseases is more likely to obscure than to elucidate research findings”.

A desire for an “ etiologically based, scientifically sound classification system”

A demand for “fundamental changes in the neo-Kraepelinian paradigm.

An “as yet unknown paradigm shift may need to occur”

Page 10: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

The hoped-for messiah – neuroscience (2003)A desire for a “brain-based

nosology”.“mental disorders might arise

from abnormalities in brain circuits” ( Hyman, 2003:98).

“By combining neuroimaging with genetic studies, physicians may be able to move psychiatric diagnoses out of the realm of symptom checklists and into the domain of objective checklists” ( Hyman, 2003: 103).

Hyman S (2003) ‘Diagnosing disorders’, Scientific American, September 2003: 97-103.

Page 11: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

The failed messiah – neuroscience (2012)A faith in a new paradigm

that would emerge from “genetics, neuroimaging, cognitive science and pathophysiology” ( Kupfer and Regier, 2011: 671)

“We imagined that these emerging . . . advances. . .would impact faster than what has actually occurred” ( Kupfer and Regier, 2011: 672)

Kupfer D and Regier D (2011) ‘Neuroscience, clinical evidence and the future of psychiatric classification in DSM-5’, Am J Psych, 168:7, July.

Page 12: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

What happened in these ten yearsGenetic complexity – no single genetic variant

linked to mental illness.The complexity of social/environmental and

polygenetic reactions.Lack of clear findings from neuroimaging studies.An increasingly dimensional approach to mental

health and illness.An increasing awareness and grappling with

brain plasticityThis amounted to a complex challenge to

biological reductionism.

Page 13: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

The split between DSM-5 and NIMH

DSM-5 published as compromise document

A “living document”Some introduction of

dimensional diagnoses.Many radical proposals

shelved - i.e. UHR traits for psychosis.

NIMH – declares its split from DSM-5.

Page 14: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Dr. Thomas Insel – current head of NIMH - Insel’s blog post available at: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/director/2013/transforming-diagnosis.shtml

DSM “tweaks” current diagnostic categories.

DSM not a “Bible”, but a dictionary.

Lack of validity.Re-orienting research

away from DSM-categories.

A split in the US between research and clinical psychiatry.

Page 15: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Is Psychiatry dying – the cultural question?

Hugo Simberg – The Garden of Death -1896

A tending of the garden of the tradition

Until something better arises

The living document of DSM-5

Page 16: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Is Psychiatry Dead – the scientific question?Conceptually dead Death in the sickroom – Edvard Munch

- 1893

It declared its lack of belief in its own categories.

A lack of belief in validityA lack of belief in

reliabilityA strong desire for

redemptionA repudiation from its

appointed and longed for messiah

Page 17: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Is Psychiatry the living dead – the political question?

Continues to diagnose more mental illness.

Continues to prescribe more medication.

Continues to coerce more people into treatment.

Page 18: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

The contemporary critical landscape

Page 19: Is Psychiatry Dying ?
Page 20: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Official psychiatry – the “practicing non-believers”Still officially Kraepelinian and neo-KraepelinianDisputes at the edges on the boundary between

sickness and health ( 3 and 4 of neo-Kraepelinian paradigm). Bereavement, mild neurocognitive disorder, gender identity dysphoria, UHR traits for psychosis)

A compulsive and frantic concern with diagnosis ( 7).

Agnosticism/confusion about validation and reliability of the constructed diagnoses (8,9).

Generally anti-pluralist tradition.

Page 21: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Cognitive or behavioural neuroscience – the “failed messiah”Research Domain CriteriaDimensional system – looking at a range from

normal to abnormal – thresholds not boundaries.

Officially agnostic about current diagnostic categories, though highly sceptical

Aims to generate new classifications from current knowledge of behaviour-brain relationships.

Page 22: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

A new pluralism ?Domains -negative valence systems, positive

valence systems, cognitive systems, working memory, social processes, arousal and regulatory processes.

Constructs within each domain – usually behavioural or cognitive in a limited way, that is amenable to testing in laboratory conditions or through fMRI.

Units of analysis (genes, molecules, cells, circuits, physiology, behaviour, self-reports)

Page 23: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

A curious disavowal of reductionism, alongside a rigidly reductionist research agenda.

A concept of human experience dependent on evolutionary theory, behaviourism and some core cognitive psychology.

Limited reflexivity about their own paradigm.Anti- Kraepelinian Broadly anti neo-Kraepelinian – agree on points

6 and 7

Page 24: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Psychiatry should become clinical or applied neuroscience.

Threshold between health and illness can be intervened upon prior to sickness.

It is pointless trying to validate Kraepelinian constructs.

Page 25: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

The “new epoch”Modern subjects are entering a new

dispensation.Increasing focus on the physical somatic

basis for mental states.Focus on surface rather than depth.Somatic individualityNeurochemical selves

Page 26: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Nikolas RoseRose N and Abi-Rached J.M (2013) Neuro, Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Against medicalisation thesis.

This is another form of subjective formation, neither better nor worse.

Service users as consumers demanding rights to better treatments.

Demanding labels or keeping their labels – “Aspies”.

“Better than well”.

Page 27: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Anti- Kraepelinian, and anti neo-Kraepelinian.Psychiatry and medicine escape their bounds

– more concerned with health than illness alone.

Reflexive about current paradigm – anti-realist.

Anti or post –humanist.

Page 28: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Conservative pluralists – “the penitents”

Attr. Guido Reni (1575 -1642)– the penitent Mary Magdalene

Robert Spitzer – critique of lack of openness of DSM-5 process

Allen Frances – Saving Normal.

Nancy Andreasen – The death of phenomenology

Tom Burns – Our Necessary Shadow

Page 29: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Frances A (2013) Saving Normal, New York:

William Morrow. “Normal badly needs saving;

sick people desperately require treatment” ( Frances, 2013: xv).

“Understanding the whole patient was often reduced to filling out a checklist” ( Frances, 2013: 67).

“The past thirty years have witnessed a frightening vicious cycle. Diagnostic inflation has led to an explosive growth in the use of psychotropic drugs. .” (Frances, 2013: 77).

Page 30: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Burns T (2013) Our Necessary Shadow. the Nature and Meaning of Psychiatry, London: Allen Lane.

“Psychiatry is a hybrid – at least two distinct cultures ( understanding and explaining) and draws from a range of theories ( psychological, biological and the social)”. ( Burns, 2013: xlviii).

“. . .the potential of the wellbeing movement to swamp psychiatry may be the profession’s intellectual salvation . . . A much needed review and retrenchment” ( Burns, 2013: 283)

Page 31: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Conservative pluralists – “The penitents”A retrenchment for psychiatry. Treat the sick –

leave the healthy alone.Careful diagnosis – a return to the skills of

descriptive psychopathology ( away from the checklist).

Kraepelinian constructs may be constructs but they are useful.

Worries over diagnostic inflation – unintended consequences

Pluralist in a piecemeal way ( don’t just dismiss psychoanalysis or phenomenology).

Page 32: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

KraepelinianBroadly neo-Kraepelinian – division of

sickness and illness, but worried about over emphasis on reliability at expense of understanding.

A belief in pluralist roots of psychiatry – understanding and explanation.

Page 33: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

“Radical humanists” – Critical psychiatry Emphasis on alliance with service users –co-

production of services, treatment and diagnoses.Concepts of recoveryEmphasis on meaning, relations and context.Critique of the biomedical tradition in psychiatry.Anti-Kraepelinian – calls to end diagnosisAnti- neo-Kraepelinian – anti-positivist, although

claims for EBP.Rational anti-psychiatryA range of different theoretical positions –

broadly pluralist.

Page 34: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

A “complaint oriented approach” instead of diagnosis – Richard Bentall

Take the experiences that people present with and respond appropriately.

Start with the person in their social context and their self-understanding and then layers of descriptions.

A human rights critique of coercive practices.

Page 35: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Radical pluralism – old psychiatry – the “suppressed potentials”A return to that which has been passed over and forgotten.An interest in Kraepelinian and pre-Kraepelinian categoriesAnti neo-KraepelinianBroad constructs can be useful and are much better than

splitting.A different perspective on the sickness and health debate –

mental health is an illusion.Anti-medicalisationAn emphasis on psychic structures not surface phenomenaContinental phenomenology ( EASE, Sass, phenomenology

and neuroscience work) and psychoanalysis ( Leader).

Page 36: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Darian LeaderLeader D(2011) What is madness ? London: Penguin

Leader D (2013)Strictly bipolar,London: Penguin.

Page 37: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

An interest in what can’t be fitted into a narrative.

A rejection of surface symptomologyAn embrace of diagnostic failure and even

failures of understanding.A challenge to the service user – “psychoanalysis

involves not responding to the patient’s demands”A critique of medicalisationA critique of cognitive and behavioural models of

experience.An understanding of madness as a construction -

a mode of understanding the world.

Page 38: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

What is to be done ?

Page 39: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Kraepelinian psychiatryIt is dying as a paradigm.The idea that there are discrete mental illnesses

with clear boundaries.The idea that there is a clear boundary between

sickness and health.The idea that we should endeavour to validate

these categories.Pluralists ( both conservative and radical) defend

this to some degree, but a futile gesture.A possibility for a critical rescue of aspects of this

tradition.

Page 40: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Sickness and healthA dignity in the response to distress.Is it possible for a psychiatric retrenchment ?The impossibility of mental health.Alongside the ethical demand to respond to

suffering.A notion of continuity and discontinuity when

thinking of sickness and health.

Page 41: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

A renewal of pluralismThe interpretive tradition that is psychiatry is not

solely dependent on Kraepelinian approaches.We still need conscious and explicit

conceptualisations of mental distress.A defence of psychiatry as a “hybrid tradition”Its very “hybrid” status could make it a harbinger

of a new kind of medicine.A different way of conceptualising understanding

and explanation in contact with less reductive concepts in neuroscience and genetics.

Page 42: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Aspects of a renewed pluralism- an emphasis on meaningA critical humanist agenda.Narratives of those with lived experience of

mental distress.An attention to madness – to what cannot be

formed as a story or easily understood.A rich attempt at a deep phenomenological

understanding that is able to tolerate an inability to completely understand.

A descriptive psychopathology that is severed from its Kraepelinian foothold.

An emphasis on social and material context that is not reducible to “stress”.

Page 43: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Against cognitivism and positivismBoth DSM-5 and the NIMH RDoC are explicitly

uninterested in any understanding of the meaning of mental distress.

A desperate attempt to be rid of any phenomenology, including descriptive phenomenology.

A reduced conception of experience – reduced to cognitions that can be replicated in functional tests.

Behaviours that can similarly be testedA concept of society that is reducible to stress,

threat, reward modalities.A concept of subjectivity that is dependent on

reductive evolutionary notions of subjective agency.

Page 44: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Neuroscience may consider itself pluralist.It only includes what can be measured.The NIMH are building up a vision of

wellness and distress that is constructed on a reduced notion of experience.

Only that which is quantified and quantifiable counts (positivism)

A splitting of the psyche into disconnected functions

Page 45: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Humanism – debating conceptions of experience

In different ways all parties to the critical landscape apart from DSM-5 and the NIMH are interested in a project of human understanding.

The possibility of conceptualisations of mental distress that begin with the human in a social context, and add layers of description to this, including layers of description from neuroscience and genetics

Not a fixed notion of what it means to be human

Page 46: Is Psychiatry Dying ?

Judith Butler – “Becoming Human” – Butler J (2005) Giving an Account of Oneself, New York: Fordham University Press.

Embodied exposure to the world – core vulnerability and openness ( can’t just be reduced to animal models of reward, threat and arousal – can’t be reduced just to the brain)

Primary relations of childhood attachment, that can’t be fully recovered or narrated ( the unconscious)

A narrative history of a life, with its own process of remembering and forgetting – a primary “opacity to myself”.

The societal structures within which I am constituted as a subject but never completely constituted ( “something is missing”)

A structure of intersubjective relations within which I tell my story, and within which I am allowed to tell my story.