Rights as Relationships: Collaborating with Faith Healers in Community Mental Health in Ghana.

Journal: Culture, medicine and psychiatry

Volume: 43

Issue: 4

Year of Publication: 2020

Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Kings College London, London, UK. ursula.read@kcl.ac.uk.

Abstract summary 

This paper explores the ways in which mental health workers think through the ethics of working with traditional and faith healers in Ghana. Despite reforms along the lines advocated by global mental health, including rights-based legislation and the expansion of community-based mental health care, such healers remain popular resources for treatment and mechanical restraint and other forms of coercion commonplace. As recommended in global mental health policy, mental health workers are urged to form collaborations with healers to prevent human rights abuses and promote psychiatric alternatives for treatment. However, precisely how such collaborations might be established is seldom described. This paper draws on ethnographic research to investigate how mental health workers approach working with healers and the moral imagination which informs their relationship. Through an analysis of trainee mental health workers' encounters with a Prophet and his patients, the paper reveals how mental health workers attempt to negotiate the tensions between their professional duty of care, their Christian faith, and the authority of healers. I argue that, rather than enforcing legal prohibitions, mental health workers seek to avoid confrontation and manouver within existing hierarchies, thereby preserving sentiments of obligation and reciprocity within a shared moral landscape and established forms of sociality.

Authors & Co-authors:  Read Ursula M UM

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Ae-Ngibise Kenneth, Cooper Sarah, Adiibokah Edward, Akpalu Bright, Lund Crick, Doku Victor, MHaPP Research Programme Consortium ‘Whether You Like It or Not People with Mental Problems are Going to go to Them’: A Qualitative Exploration into the Widespread Use of Traditional and Faith Healers in the Provision of Mental Health Care in Ghana. International Review of Psychiatry. 2010;22(6):558–567. doi: 10.3109/09540261.2010.536149.
Authors :  1
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1007/s11013-019-09648-3
SSN : 1573-076X
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Adult
Other Terms
Collaboration;Community mental health;Ghana;Human rights;Traditional and faith healing
Study Design
Ethnographic Study,Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
Ghana
Publication Country
Netherlands