Demedicalizing mental health: Toward community-based approaches

Auteurs-es

  • Simon Adam

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25071/gwpkf143

Biographie de l'auteur-e

  • Simon Adam

    Simon Adam is a social scientist in nursing. His program of scholarship focuses on the mental health industry, its institutional and discursive dimensions, the consumer/survivor/mad experience, and alternative and counterhegemonic ways of conceptualizing human illness, suffering, and crisis. His work considers what is currently termed “mental illness” as being largely a product of social, economic, and political apparatuses, and examines how education, professionalization, and pop culture reproduce a medicalized understanding of an otherwise normal human condition. Simon works with various communities, including psychiatric survivors and psychiatric consumers, mad people, neurodiverse people, and people who use drugs. In addition to scholarly venues, his work also appears on his podcast, Crazy Making, at anchor.fm/crazymaking.

Références

Adam, S. (2017). Crazy making: The institutional relations of undergraduate nursing in the reproduction of biomedical psychiatry. International Journal of Nursing Education Scholarship, 14(1).

Adam, S., & Juergensen, L. (2019). Toward critical thinking as a virtue: The case of mental health nursing education. Nurse Education in Practice, 38, 138 – 144.

Adam, S., van Daalen-Smith, C., & Juergensen, L. (2019). The indispensability of critique: Reflections on bearing witness to mental health discourse. Canadian Journal of Critical Nursing Discourse, 1(1), 39 – 48.

American Psychiatric Association (APA). (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). American Psychiatric Publishing.

Johnson, S., Adam, S., & McIntosh, M. (2020). The lived experience of postpartum depression: A review of the literature. Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 41(7), 584 – 591.

Toronto Neighbourhood Centres. (2021). Rethinking community safety: A step forward for Toronto. https://neighbourhoodcentres.ca/sites/default/files/2021-01/Rethinking%20Community%20Safety%20%20A%20Step%20Forward%20For%20Toronto%20-%20Full%20Report.pdf

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Publié

2021-08-31

Comment citer

Demedicalizing mental health: Toward community-based approaches. (2021). Canada Watch. https://doi.org/10.25071/gwpkf143