2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.nedt.2015.07.033
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Queering the relationship between evidence-based mental health and psychiatric diagnosis: Some implications for international mental health nurse curricular development

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
1
1

Citation Types

0
6
0

Year Published

2016
2016
2016
2016

Publication Types

Select...
2

Relationship

1
1

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 2 publications
(6 citation statements)
references
References 5 publications
0
6
0
Order By: Relevance
“…In turn, this can facilitate the emergence of a plurality of more fluid ways of understanding the identities of users of healthcare in terms of difference rather than pathology. This is discussed and reflected in both recent Queer paradigm work (Grant et al, 2015b), and in principles, practices and understandings emerging from the Psychosocial paradigm (Grant, 2015;Smith and Grant, 2016). …”
Section: Poetry In the Health Humanities Paradigmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In turn, this can facilitate the emergence of a plurality of more fluid ways of understanding the identities of users of healthcare in terms of difference rather than pathology. This is discussed and reflected in both recent Queer paradigm work (Grant et al, 2015b), and in principles, practices and understandings emerging from the Psychosocial paradigm (Grant, 2015;Smith and Grant, 2016). …”
Section: Poetry In the Health Humanities Paradigmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The phenomenological‐humanist binary apparent in ‘researcher‐researched’ and ‘professional‐patient’ arguably also contributes to maintaining such a cultural divide. This binary has been undermined recently in my own work and the work of a colleague in relational autoethnographic writing where the researchers and the researched are the same people, who celebrate a postcolonial hybrid identity status as both mental health researchers‐professionals and service‐users or survivors of the UK institutional mental health system (Grant et al ., ,b; Williams, ).…”
Section: Challenging Liberal Humanist Othering Representational Practmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is not surprising, therefore, that the stories told by participants in qualitative health research articles can range from displaying, replicating, and re‐circulating these master narratives, to contesting and violating them (Frank, ; Grant et al ., ,b). Recent examples of this in my own writing display the ways in which mental health survivors have resisted staying ‘narratively entrapped’ in diagnostic and pejorative psychiatric narratives by ‘restorying’ themselves through the use of reflexive autoethnographic writing methods (Grant et al ., ).…”
Section: Posthumanismmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations