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Soc Sci Med ; 344: 116649, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38412805

RESUMO

While critical sociologists and anthropologists of health have questioned Global Mental Health policies as postcolonial, developmental agendas, little is known on how this critique applies within the central and eastern European countries. As this article shows with the case of Poland, since the advent of capitalism and liberal democracy, the psychiatric conceptualization of depression has steadily aligned with global mental health (GMH) frameworks, amplifying pre-existing trends towards biomedical dominance in Polish psychiatry and the economic framing of mental health in policy-making. These trends are evidenced by the study of Polish Psychiatry, an official journal issued by Polish Psychiatric Association and health policy documents published since the 2010s, including statements by the Ministry of Health. Two findings are presented: first, the logic of 'closing the gap' between Poland and the West has shaped how depression prevalence data is produced and interpreted by state medical institutions and in expert psychiatric discourse; second, the reconceptualization of mental illness through its supposed economic cost has become a dominant approach to depression in Polish psychiatry and public health. Thus, in showing how the Global Mental Health agenda has permeated the specific context of Poland, promoting more individual and biomedical conceptions of mental illness, this case study enables advancing the postcolonial critique of mental health.


Assuntos
Transtornos Mentais , Psiquiatria , Humanos , Saúde Mental , Polônia/epidemiologia , Depressão/diagnóstico , Depressão/epidemiologia
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