Considering patient narrative-based and medico-scientific epistemologies in framing psychiatric care
Date
Authors
Looi, Jeffrey
Bastiampillai, Tarun
Allison, Stephen
Maguire, Paul
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Sage Publications Inc
Abstract
Objective
Personal narratives of lived experience with psychiatric illness and distress remain central in the epistemology of mental illness. We provide a commentary on this potential bridging of patient narrative-based epistemology, and medico-scientific epistemology used by psychiatrists used for diagnosis, formulation, prognosis and treatment.
Conclusion
Discussion and planning of psychiatric care can be framed by understanding the narrative-based epistemology of a patient’s illness as highlighted by five key questions to explore the patient’s illness explanatory models. We propose five key questions for the psychiatrist’s complementary consideration of medico-scientific epistemology that frame conceptual models of aetiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, formulation, prognosis and treatment, which are embedded in the predominant socio-cultural environment. These questions assist in bridging patient narrative and medico-scientific explanatory models to facilitate more effective collaborative care planning.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Australasian Psychiatry
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31