Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-2lccl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T23:33:28.228Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gender, power and mental illness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2018

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
From the Editor's Desk
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2018 

Structural sources of gender inequality

Improving the health of women around the world is a critical global health goal, with implications for the health and well-being of women, children and families.Reference Temmerman, Khosla, Laski, Mathews and Say 1 , Reference Nilsen, Skipstein and Demerouti 2 The actions must include the prevention of violence and emotional and sexual abuse of women and children, these being among the most powerful and effective public health interventions ensuring positive impacts over the life course.Reference Banyard, Williams and Siegel 3 , Reference Graffunder, Noonan, Cox and Wheaton 4 Although there are improvements in global indices of maternal mortality and access to education and career development, anxiety and depression are more common in women, suicide is a leading cause of death in younger and older women,Reference Temmerman, Khosla, Laski, Mathews and Say 1 and violence toward women is especially problematic in conflict zonesReference Rees, Tol, Mohsin, Tay, Tam and Dos Reis 5 , Reference Dossa, Zunzunegui, Hatem and Fraser 6 where prevention efforts have to be married with empowering interventions.Reference Chiumento, Hamdani, Khan, Dawson, Bryant and Sijbrandij 7 Strain in culturally defined gender roles, stigma of poor mental health and discrimination by gender and by other forms of minority status – sexual or ethnic identity – all combined to lead to poorer mental health.Reference Wadsworth, Dhillon, Shaw, Bhui, Stansfeld and Smith 8 Reference Kucharska 10

At the time of writing, we are celebrating 100 years of women being legally entitled to the vote in the UK, yet we seem in many ways to be no further forward. There is a sudden epidemic, a realisation, a breaking into conscious of the prevalent aggression and sexual violence toward women in all industries. So how far have we come? Inequalities in pay, exposure to risk factors for poor mental health and violence are still significant and visible. There are numerous less visible instances of discrimination, subtle enactments through power relationships in everyday life, daily hassles and occurrences that perhaps are either not recognised and remedied or not accepted as having pernicious effects. The concept of microaggressions has arisen in the racism and sexual identity discrimination literature;Reference Woodford, Howell, Kulick and Silverschanz 11 Reference Hall and Fields 13 this concept applies to the persistent and subtle erosion of respect and limitations of opportunity that women face, as they are overlooked and assumed to not be sufficiently strong or powerful or robust to deal with the demands of senior roles in health services, academic institutions and in board positions in industry. The structural sources of gender disadvantage operate even in high-income countries with established policies on gender equalities. How widespread must they be where there is no policy or where there are ingrained and societally sanctioned structures that afford a lower status to women and their human rights? Societal disadvantages are engineered into the structures through which power relationships operate, and permeate organisations to influence the conversations and interpersonal behaviours. These seemingly ordinary experiences leave a negative experience or impression on the lives of women, and children and younger women will be growing up in such environments, accommodating to expectations. It is painful to see young girls and women live their lives in fear of emotional or physical attacks, of interpersonal violence and sexual abuse, and needing to overcome structural disadvantages that constrain opportunities to flourish. Bartlett & Hollins’ editorial on women in prisons (pp. 134–136) illustrates how disadvantage and early violence can lead to later incarceration with little awareness of the needs to address victimisation in therapeutic or healthcare contexts. The stories we tell ourselves about gender disadvantage in society and in our institutions now need to be challenged.

Power and psychiatric practice

Power imbalances are a concern in clinical practice in general; patients feel ill informed and experience limited choices, and professionals recommend a course of action for the care plan that does not attend to the personalised stories and the world views of the patient. This means that care practices can become oppressive or be experienced as detached and remote from the concerns of patients, although this is not intentional. For example, women with pre-eclampsia are more likely to have children with autism, and although Dachew et al (pp. 142–147) recommend screening of children of mothers with pre-eclampsia, the potential value and harms needs careful weighing to avoid further enactments of power that deprive people of choice. Power in psychiatric settings is especially visible when a person is detained against their will and compulsorily treated, with medication, with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) or with a social and psychological regimen of treatment. Community treatment orders (CTO) aim to support the community-based treatment of patients with less need for in-patient care and detention; yet Trevithick et al (pp. 175–179) find that the number of CTOs is proportional to the growing rise in detentions in general. CTOs are more likely after forensic sections, and the variation in the use of CTOs is not consistent with the patterns of detention and compulsory treatment in hospital settings. The exercise of such power demands great care to ensure equity, safety and the protection of dignity and rights in the care process, otherwise complaints about coercion abound. Restraint as a form of intervention can be harmful; Sethi et al (pp. 137–141) suggest no specific form of restraint is better than another, and all carry risk but become necessary in rare instances.

Vulnerability and power

People with intellectual disability face enormous imbalances of power during interactions with care services. Practitioners who learn positive behavioural support appear to not reduce challenging behaviours of patients with intellectual disabilities (Hassiotis et al, pp. 161–168), but safe, careful and respectful management of challenging behaviour is still essential. Patients and professionals are concerned about how a lack of power in positions of lesser influence can promote coping that involves accommodation to incivilities; this can lead to low self-esteem and compound self-stigma. Morris et al (pp. 169–174) offer a new way of measuring self-stigma, which should be carefully assessed as a by-product of care processes. Alongside cautions about care processes, other scientific advances offer powerful new treatments, for example, to reduce cognitive decline and mortality in people with Down syndrome and Alzheimer's disease (Eady et al, pp. 155–160).

Psychosis, depression and persistent mental illnesses are disabling, and also associated with loss of power in clinical encounters; recovery is possible and promoted by careful use of social, psychological and pharmacological interventions.Reference Lally, Ajnakina, Stubbs, Cullinane, Murphy and Gaughran 14 In this regard, several research findings in this month's issue of BJPsych offer the power to better foster recovery. For example, van den Berg et al (pp. 180–182) show that trauma-focused psychological interventions are effective even in the presence of psychosis, which by some is considered to be a negative prognostic indicator. Treatment-resistant depression has been a focus of a number of recent papers in BJPsych;Reference Fernie, Currie, Perrin, Stewart, Anderson and Bennett 15 , Reference McGirr, Berlim, Bond, Chan, Yatham and Lam 16 ketamine may offer earlier improvement in treatment-resistant depression (Andrade, pp. 129–130; Heslin & Young, pp. 131–133) but appears no better than ECT in the longer term; the concerns about some selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors leading to a greater risk of suicide in the treatment of depression appear to not be warranted by a new analysis (Näslund, pp. 148–154).Reference Wijlaars, Nazareth, Whitaker, Evans and Petersen 17 Finally, our nosologies as powerful schema require ongoing refinement.Reference El-Mallakh and Doenninghaus 18 The status of psychotic depression is being reconsidered, as a heterogeneous and potential fluctuating set of symptoms and experiences (Heslin & Young, pp. 131–133) in need of more research efforts.

The Psychiatry Ashes

As outlined last month, the friendly competition between the editorial boards of the BJPsych and the Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry has begun in earnest. Ten members of the Editorial Board are joining me in donning whites for BJPsych: Simon Wessely, Glyn Lewis, Pim Cuijpers, Allan Young, Matthew Hotopf, Michael King, Emily Simonoff, Francis Anthony O'Neill, Navneet Kapur and Louise Howard. Detailed scoring rules and a full list of the chosen batting papers (BPs) appear in our opponent's February issue. 19 Briefly, each player's BPs have been picked, assigned a stroke power and sent into the field to score runs (citations). Final scores will depend on a BP's stroke power (a measure of its initial impact) and the number of runs (citations) it earns in 2018. We will publish score updates throughout the course of the year.

References

1 Temmerman, M, Khosla, R, Laski, L, Mathews, Z, Say, L. Women and Health Working Group for the Global Strategy for Women's, Children's and Adolescents’ Health. Women's health priorities and interventions. BMJ 2015; 351: h4147.Google Scholar
2 Nilsen, W, Skipstein, A, Demerouti, E. Adverse trajectories of mental health problems predict subsequent burnout and work-family conflict–a longitudinal study of employed women with children followed over 18 years. BMC Psychiatry 2016; 16: 384.Google Scholar
3 Banyard, VL, Williams, LM, Siegel, JA. The long-term mental health consequences of child sexual abuse: an exploratory study of the impact of multiple traumas in a sample of women. J Trauma Stress 2001; 14: 697715.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4 Graffunder, CM, Noonan, RK, Cox, P, Wheaton, J. Through a public health lens. Preventing violence against women: an update from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. J Womens Health (Larchmt) 2004; 13: 516.Google Scholar
5 Rees, SJ, Tol, W, Mohsin, M, Tay, AK, Tam, N, Dos Reis, N, et al. A high-risk group of pregnant women with elevated levels of conflict-related trauma, intimate partner violence, symptoms of depression and other forms of mental distress in post-conflict Timor-Leste. Transl Psychiatry 2016; 6: e725.Google Scholar
6 Dossa, NI, Zunzunegui, MV, Hatem, M, Fraser, WD. Mental health disorders among women victims of conflict-related sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo. J Interpers Violence 2015; 30: 2199–220.Google Scholar
7 Chiumento, A, Hamdani, SU, Khan, MN, Dawson, K, Bryant, RA, Sijbrandij, M, et al. Evaluating effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a group psychological intervention using cognitive behavioural strategies for women with common mental disorders in conflict-affected rural Pakistan: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial. Trials 2017; 18: 190.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
8 Wadsworth, E, Dhillon, K, Shaw, C, Bhui, K, Stansfeld, S, Smith, A. Racial discrimination, ethnicity and work stress. Occup Med 2007;57:1824.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9 Calabrese, SK, Meyer, IH, Overstreet, NM, Haile, R, Hansen, NB. Exploring discrimination and mental health disparities faced by black sexual minority women using a minority stress framework. Psychol Women Q 2015; 39: 287304.Google Scholar
10 Kucharska, J. Cumulative trauma, gender discrimination and mental health in women: mediating role of self-esteem. J Ment Health 2017; 20 December (doi: 10.1080/09638237.2017.1417548).Google Scholar
11 Woodford, MR, Howell, ML, Kulick, A, Silverschanz, P. “That's so gay”: heterosexual male undergraduates and the perpetuation of sexual orientation microagressions on campus. J Interpers Violence 2013; 28: 416–35.Google Scholar
12 Lewis, JA, Williams, MG, Peppers, EJ, Gadson, CA. Applying intersectionality to explore the relations between gendered racism and health among Black women. J Couns Psychol 2017; 64: 475–86.Google Scholar
13 Hall, JM, Fields, B. Continuing the conversation in nursing on race and racism. Nurs Outlook 2013; 61: 164–73.Google Scholar
14 Lally, J, Ajnakina, O, Stubbs, B, Cullinane, M, Murphy, KC, Gaughran, F, et al. Remission and recovery from first-episode psychosis in adults: systematic review and meta-analysis of long-term outcome studies. Br J Psychiatry 2017; 211: 350–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
15 Fernie, G, Currie, J, Perrin, JS, Stewart, CA, Anderson, V, Bennett, DM, et al. Ketamine as the anaesthetic for electroconvulsive therapy: the KANECT randomised controlled trial. Br J Psychiatry 2017; 210: 422–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
16 McGirr, A, Berlim, MT, Bond, DJ, Chan, PY, Yatham, LN, Lam, RW. Adjunctive ketamine in electroconvulsive therapy: updated systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Psychiatry 2017; 210: 403–7.Google Scholar
17 Wijlaars, LP, Nazareth, I, Whitaker, HJ, Evans, SJ, Petersen, I. Suicide-related events in young people following prescription of SSRIs and other antidepressants: a self-controlled case series analysis. BMJ Open 2013; 3: e003247.Google Scholar
18 El-Mallakh, RS, Doenninghaus, S. The power of language: use in psychiatry. Br J Psychiatry 2016; 208: 78.Google Scholar
19 ANZJP Editorial Office. The Psychiatry Ashes Test February update. ANZJP 2018; 52: 211–4.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.