What "voice-hearers" change to the listening of hallucinations? II. Researches on voice hearing

被引:1
|
作者
Evrard, Renaud [1 ]
Le Malefan, Pascal [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Strasbourg, Ctr Informat Rech & Consultat Experiences Excepti, CMP Sect 1E, EA 3071, F-57100 Thionville, France
[2] Univ Rouen, Dept Psychol, Lab Psy NCA, EA4306, F-76821 Mont St Aignan, France
来源
ANNALES MEDICO-PSYCHOLOGIQUES | 2013年 / 171卷 / 09期
关键词
Beliefs; Differential clinical practice; Exceptional experiences; Psychotic continuum; Social psychiatry; Voice-hearers; AUDITORY HALLUCINATIONS; EXPERIENCES; POPULATION; PSYCHOSIS;
D O I
10.1016/j.amp.2013.05.028
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Objectives. - Several studies have shown the high prevalence of experiences of acoustic-verbal hallucinations (so-called "voices") in non-psychiatric individuals. From the 1980s was constituted an international movement - the "voice hearers" - who relativize but also fertilize the clinical knowledge on the listening of hallucinations. This paper proposes to question some of aspects of the debate on "voice hearers" when integrating it within the broader contemporary models attempting to account for "psychotic-like experiences" or "exceptional experiences". Materials. - A brief review of scientific literature on these experiences help to compare psychiatric, psychoanalytic and more specialized researches on "voice-hearing". We also compare classical clinical positions with new ones. Results. - It appears that "voice-hearers" introduce a reversal of some classical prejudices, in moving towards a treatment of psychotic-like experiences as if they were neurotic expressions. Paranormal and spiritual interpretations of voices are ubiquitous in many studies of voice hearing, and even are outstanding examples of salutogenic appraisals of psychotic-like experiences. The research on the type of appraisal along the axes of internal/external or personal/impersonal provides direct guidance on clinical intervention strategies. Conclusions. - No longer focusing on the "what" but rather on the "how" of hallucinations experiences helps to avoid some biases relative to the assessment of beliefs - especially unusual beliefs - in the clinical setting. As the figurehead of the broader movement of "recovery", the Hearing Voices Movement offers a competitive clinical practice, but failed to provide a true differential clinical practice starting from a neutral name referring to several psychopathological pathways that need to be distinguished. (c) 2013 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:629 / 634
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Hearing a voice in the noise: auditory hallucinations and speech perception
    Vercammen, A.
    de Haan, E. H. F.
    Aleman, A.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE, 2008, 38 (08) : 1177 - 1184
  • [32] Auditory hallucinations as a personal experience: analysis of non-psychiatric voice hearers' narrations
    Faccio, E.
    Romaioli, D.
    Dagani, J.
    Cipolletta, S.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC AND MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2013, 20 (09) : 761 - 767
  • [33] Telling stories and hearing voices: narrative work with voice hearers in acute care
    Place, C.
    Foxcroft, R.
    Shaw, J.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC AND MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2011, 18 (09) : 837 - 842
  • [34] Voice hearing within the context of hearers' social worlds: An interpretative phenomenological analysis
    Mawson, Amy
    Berry, Katherine
    Murray, Craig
    Hayward, Mark
    PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHOTHERAPY-THEORY RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2011, 84 (03) : 256 - 272
  • [35] Listening and Hearing: A Voice Hearer's Invitation into Relationship
    Britz, Berta
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 8
  • [36] "It allowed us to let our pain out": perspectives from voice-hearers and their voices on the 'talking with voices' approach
    Middleton, Kerry
    Cooke, Anne
    May, Rufus
    PSYCHOSIS-PSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIAL AND INTEGRATIVE APPROACHES, 2024, 16 (02): : 131 - 143
  • [37] Validation and clinical usefulness of the Hamilton Program for Schizophrenia Voices Questionnaire (HPSVQ) among French-speaking voice-hearers
    Zanello, Adriano
    Perez, Alexandra Guzman
    Maksimovic, Jasmina
    Wood, Sophie
    Sentissi, Othman
    ENCEPHALE-REVUE DE PSYCHIATRIE CLINIQUE BIOLOGIQUE ET THERAPEUTIQUE, 2024, 50 (03): : 300 - 308
  • [38] what are we missing? voice and listening as an event
    Carvalho, Magda Costa
    Almeida, Tiago
    Taramona-Trigoso, Jose Maria
    CHILDHOOD AND PHILOSOPHY, 2023, 19
  • [39] Hearing Voices and Listening to What They Say The Importance of Voice Content in Understanding and Working With Distressing Voices
    Beavan, Vanessa
    Read, John
    JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE, 2010, 198 (03) : 201 - 205
  • [40] Patient voice in core outcome sets: are we hearing but not listening?
    Gordijn, S. J.
    Ganzevoort, W.
    BJOG-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY, 2021, 128 (11) : 1869 - 1869