Unveiling patienthood in psychiatric care: an ethnographic study in Nigeria.

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology & Medicine Pub Date : 2025-02-26 DOI:10.1080/13648470.2025.2453366
Timothy Olanrewaju Alabi
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Abstract

This article explores the creation, significance, and implications of patienthood within biomedical psychiatric hospital care practices, a topic that has often received insufficient attention from researchers. Using an ethnographic approach and discursive narrative framework, I argue that patienthood in this mental hospital is a social status deliberately constructed to facilitate decision-making regarding treatment and to guide social interactions within the hospital context. While patienthood is created within the hospital, its effects extend beyond its walls. I demonstrate that patienthood is a multifaceted concept emerging from 'assemblage practices' within the hospital, involving numerous human and nonhuman entities contributing to its creation and perpetuation. The processes underpinning patienthood are dispersed and collectively shaped by multiple 'agents', often diminishing the patient's active agency. This paper contributes to empirical knowledge and enhances our theoretical understanding of doctor-patient relationships and the evolving concept of 'patienthood' over the past six decades. It bridges the divide between older and contemporary literature and perspectives on doctor-patient relationships and patient agency, particularly concerning the Parsonian 'sick-role' and 'assemblages' theory. Furthermore, the article addresses the implications of its findings for mental health care, paving the way for a more comprehensive understanding of the complexities involved in caring for individuals with mental health issues.

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揭示精神病护理中的病人身份:尼日利亚的人种学研究。
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Unveiling patienthood in psychiatric care: an ethnographic study in Nigeria. Correction. A matter of balance. Positioning of parents' selves through negotiations of symptoms' meaning at a pain clinic for children/young people. The insensitivity of 'sensitive care': the bureaucracy of pregnancy tissue disposal in England, UK. Temporal curation: curating life in the anticipation of cancer.
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