Implications for practice
There are already many theories of causation of mental distress and it is difficult to see how any additional theoretical perspective could truly add anything to our understanding of mental distress, mental health or mental health care. Indeed, one of the most striking features of the history of men...
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          | Published in | Critical Perspectives on Mental Health pp. 180 - 189 | 
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| Main Authors | , | 
| Format | Book Chapter | 
| Language | English | 
| Published | 
        United Kingdom
          Routledge
    
        2000
     Taylor & Francis Group  | 
| Subjects | |
| Online Access | Get full text | 
| ISBN | 1857288807 1857288793 9781857288797 9781857288803  | 
| DOI | 10.4324/9780203129593-13 | 
Cover
| Summary: | There are already many theories of causation of mental distress and it is
difficult to see how any additional theoretical perspective could truly add
anything to our understanding of mental distress, mental health or mental
health care. Indeed, one of the most striking features of the history of mental
health care is the way in which various writers, who claim to have developed
new therapeutic interventions, seem to have in fact rediscovered older
perspectives which have either fallen into relative obscurity as intellectual
fashions have changed or have always been relatively unknown. For example,
the milieu therapy and social therapy advocated by some psychiatrists during
the 1950s and 1960s bears some resemblance to the ideals (if not the reality) of
eighteenth and nineteenth century ‘moral treatment’. Similarly, the ethos of
Fred Newman’s East Side Institute for Short-Term Psychotherapy has some
resonance with the philosophies of some of the less psychoanalytically
orientated therapeutic communities (see Kennard, 1998). To misquote a
catchphrase from a cult television programme, the truth is already out there.
The challenge for mental health professionals is to get beyond dogmatic
adherence to any one particular theory on the one hand, and haphazard
eclecticism on the other, so that they might discover it. In the previous chapter
we suggested a framework of theoretical guidelines which may be applied to
any combination of theories to aid constructive critical consideration of issues
pertinent to mental health, mental distress and mental health care. In this final
chapter, we set out the implications which we believe such a theoretical
approach has for practice. | 
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| ISBN: | 1857288807 1857288793 9781857288797 9781857288803  | 
| DOI: | 10.4324/9780203129593-13 |