触觉:精神疾病患者在医疗护理中的触觉缺失与存在。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Iben Emilie Christensen, Mette Bech Risør, Lone Grøn, Susanne Reventlow
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引用次数: 1

摘要

触觉是一种基本的感觉,也是五种感觉中最未被探索的,尽管它对我们所做的与自己和他人有关的一切都很重要。研究表明,触摸产生信任、关怀和舒适,是构成身体的必要条件。基于民族志的田野调查,本研究探讨了在精神疾病患者与专业人员的互动中,在与全科医生、神经科医生、物理治疗师以及按摩师的卫生保健接触中,触摸的缺失和存在。我们发现,精神疾病患者的触摸和身体检查在医疗保健中缺席,让患者感到格格不入,被误解,不被社会认可,不值得信任。根据Honneth和Guenther的研究,我们得出结论,触摸和被触摸是认知的一个重要维度——无论是对病人的身体感觉和症状,还是对他们作为脱离精神病学标签的人,都是如此——同时也有助于自我和人格的构成。这些发现证实,触摸作为一种存在的铰链,确认了患者、身体和他人之间的联系,并赋予了时间、空间和存在感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Senses of Touch: The Absence and Presence of Touch in Health Care Encounters of Patients with Mental Illness.

Touch is a fundamental sense and the most unexplored of the five senses, despite its significance for everything we do in relation to ourselves and others. Studies have shown that touch generates trust, care and comfort and is essential for constituting the body. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, this study explores the absence and presence of touch in interactions between people with mental illness and professionals, in health care encounters with general practitioners, neurologists and physiotherapists, as well as masseurs. We found that touch and physical examination of patients with mental illness is absent in health care encounters, leaving the patients with feelings of being out of place, misunderstood, less socially approved and less worthy of trust. Drawing on Honneth and Guenther, we conclude that touch and being touched is an essential dimension of recognition-both of the patients' bodily sensations and symptoms and of them as human beings, detached from the psychiatric label-as well as contributing to the constitution of self and personhood. These findings confirm that touch works as an existential hinge that affirms a connection between the patient, the body and others and gives a sense of time, space and existence.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
49
期刊介绍: Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry is an international and interdisciplinary forum for the publication of work in three interrelated fields: medical and psychiatric anthropology, cross-cultural psychiatry, and related cross-societal and clinical epidemiological studies. The journal publishes original research, and theoretical papers based on original research, on all subjects in each of these fields. Interdisciplinary work which bridges anthropological and medical perspectives and methods which are clinically relevant are particularly welcome, as is research on the cultural context of normative and deviant behavior, including the anthropological, epidemiological and clinical aspects of the subject. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry also fosters systematic and wide-ranging examinations of the significance of culture in health care, including comparisons of how the concept of culture is operationalized in anthropological and medical disciplines. With the increasing emphasis on the cultural diversity of society, which finds its reflection in many facets of our day to day life, including health care, Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry is required reading in anthropology, psychiatry and general health care libraries.
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