Setting Mental Health Priorities: An Essay in Comparative Social Epistemology

被引:0
|
作者
Faucher, Luc [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Quebec Montreal, Montreal, PQ, Canada
来源
PHILOSOPHIQUES | 2022年 / 49卷 / 01期
关键词
psychiatry; social epistemology; priorities; epistemic ignorance; patients; well-ordered science; DOMAIN-CRITERIA RDOC; BRAIN; DIAGNOSIS; EUROPE; DSM-5; NIMH;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号
01 ; 0101 ;
摘要
In this paper, I will raise an issue that has been overlooked so far in the philosophy of psychiatry literature regarding the Research Domain Criteria: the fact that the initiative stems from the research priorities of the National Institute of Mental Health and that the focus of the latter does not address certain aspects of patient conditions which are deemed essential by the patients themselves. Having demonstrated the existence of this problem, I will try to see how it could be avoided. To do so, I will consider a European program this time, the Roadmap for Mental Health Research in Europe and its method for integrating a diversity of voices, including those of patients, into the process of setting research priorities. I will thus engage in an exercise of comparative social epistemology by showing how certain organizational characteristics of one of the programs possess epistemic virtues that are lacking in the other and how greater epistemic justice could be obtained through the implementation of certain mechanisms that allow the voice of patients to be heard.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 133
页数:33
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Setting priorities for global mental health research
    Tomlinson, Mark
    Rudan, Igor
    Saxena, Shekhar
    Swartz, Leslie
    Tsai, Alexander C.
    Patel, Vikram
    BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION, 2009, 87 (06) : 438 - 446
  • [2] Setting priorities for mental health research in Brazil
    Gregorio, Guilherme
    Tomlinson, Mark
    Gerolin, Jeronimo
    Kieling, Christian
    Moreira, Hugo Cogo
    Razzouk, Denise
    Mari, Jair de Jesus
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE PSIQUIATRIA, 2012, 34 (04) : 434 - 439
  • [3] SETTING MENTAL-HEALTH PRIORITIES - PROBLEMS AND POSSIBILITIES
    CALLAHAN, D
    MILBANK QUARTERLY, 1994, 72 (03): : 451 - 470
  • [4] Essay on epistemology for the social sciences
    Deprez, Stanislas
    REVUE PHILOSOPHIQUE DE LA FRANCE ET DE L ETRANGER, 2022, 147 (04): : 548 - 550
  • [5] What price mental health? The ethics and politics of setting priorities
    Yates, G
    BIOETHICS, 1998, 12 (01) : 88 - 89
  • [6] Mental and neurological health research priorities setting in developing countries
    Sudhir Khandelwal
    Gilbert Avodé
    Florence Baingana
    Bernado Conde
    Marcelo Cruz
    Parameshvara Deva
    Michel Dumas
    Walter Gulbinat
    Carmen Lopez
    John Mayeya
    Malik H. Mubbashar
    Ahmad Mohit
    David Ndeti
    Dainius Puras
    Khalid Saeed
    Klaas Schilder
    Donald Silberberg
    Toma Tomov
    Clare Townsend
    Valentina Iemmi
    Rachel Jenkins
    Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 2010, 45 : 487 - 495
  • [7] Setting priorities for mental health care in Nepal: a formative study
    Mark JD Jordans
    Nagendra P Luitel
    Mark Tomlinson
    Ivan H Komproe
    BMC Psychiatry, 13
  • [8] Mental and neurological health research priorities setting in developing countries
    Khandelwal, Sudhir
    Avode, Gilbert
    Baingana, Florence
    Conde, Bernado
    Cruz, Marcelo
    Deva, Parameshvara
    Dumas, Michel
    Gulbinat, Walter
    Lopez, Carmen
    Mayeya, John
    Mubbashar, Malik H.
    Mohit, Ahmad
    Ndeti, David
    Puras, Dainius
    Saeed, Khalid
    Schilder, Klaas
    Silberberg, Donald
    Tomov, Toma
    Townsend, Clare
    Iemmi, Valentina
    Jenkins, Rachel
    SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2010, 45 (04) : 487 - 495
  • [9] Setting priorities for mental health care in Nepal: a formative study
    Jordans, Mark J. D.
    Luitel, Nagendra P.
    Tomlinson, Mark
    Komproe, Ivan H.
    BMC PSYCHIATRY, 2013, 13
  • [10] Setting health priorities
    Kerwin, R
    JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS OF LONDON, 1999, 33 (02): : 192 - 193