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Challenging the globalisation of biomedical psychiatry

Philip Thomas (Bradford University)
Patrick Bracken (West Cork Mental Health Service, Ireland)
Rufus May (Assertive outreach team Bradford District NHS Care Trust)
Salma Yasmeen (Sharing Voices, Bradford)

Journal of Public Mental Health

ISSN: 1746-5729

Article publication date: 1 September 2005

311

Abstract

For over 100 years biomedical psychiatry has dominated the way people throughout the western world understand their sadness and distress, despite the lack of empirical evidence that distress has a biological basis. Now, the interests of the global pharmaceutical industry and trans‐national professional elites such as the World Health Organisation and the World Psychiatric Association are extending these biomedical accounts across the globe. This paper briefly describes biomedical psychiatry and its origins before considering how this project is closely aligned to the interests of the pharmaceutical industry. It ends with a call for a new agenda in mental health, driven by the concerns and interests of ordinary people in local communities, and an outline of recent developments in Britain and elsewhere that illustrate this challenge to the biomedical hegemony.

Keywords

Citation

Thomas, P., Bracken, P., Cutler, P., Hayward, R., May, R. and Yasmeen, S. (2005), "Challenging the globalisation of biomedical psychiatry", Journal of Public Mental Health, Vol. 4 No. 3, pp. 23-32. https://doi.org/10.1108/17465729200500021

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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