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Bioethicist: Mental illness subject to
biological and sociocultural factors
Newswise — Biology is
crucial to understanding psychosis, “but
there is more to psychosis than mere
biology,” says Jason Robert, an Arizona
State University bioethicist and philosopher
of science.
“Psychiatrists in
particular appear to be grappling with the
complexity of classification and diagnosis,”
Robert explains.
“But I am always worried
that the prime material of the psychiatrist
– often ill, unhappy people who behave in
bizarre ways – will be ignored in favor of
DNA tests results or brain images, with
almost certainly negative impacts on patient
well-being.”
Robert, an assistant
professor in the School of Life Sciences at
ASU’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,
brings conceptual research and perspective
to the subject of cross-cultural issues in
defining mental illness during a
presentation on Feb. 16 at the American
Association for the Advancement of Science
annual meeting.
“My claim is that gene
maps and brain scans will likely not be able
to offer universal, culture-free
representations of the essence of mental
illness.
"That is, mental illness is subject
to biological and socio-cultural factors,
such that isolating any of these as core
elements will almost always miss the mark at
the expense of patient care,” he says.
Robert will dissect the
notion that personalized medicine is the
wave of the future.
“In many people’s minds,
personalized medicine means medicine
tailored to an individual’s genetic makeup.
"We have heard over and over again that
genetics and neuroscience will revolutionize
medicine, and these claims come with
elaborate predictions about new taxonomies
of disease, new diagnostic tools, and
fabulous new treatments.
“None of these
predictions have borne out, in part because
they fail to grapple with the complexity of
human beings – as brains, bodies, and,
embedded in culture, steeped in history, and
dynamically creating their own words,” he
says.
“If we’re really going
to have personalized medicine, we have to be
focusing not just on the genome, but the
person,” Robert says.
He adds that this is
an emphasis with medical students in the
University of Arizona College of Medicine –
Phoenix, in partnership with Arizona State
University, where he holds a faculty joint
appointment.
“We feel this newest
generation of physicians have to be deeply
well-trained in genetics and neuroscience,
but not at the expense of a deep and
meaningful training in interpersonal
communication, interaction with actual
people who really at the end of the day are
your patients and your first priority,”
Robert says.
Robert will introduce
the AAAS audience to the complexity of
diagnosis and management of mental illness,
from the perspective of the individual and
across cultural boundaries.
“Within psychiatry,
questions about the aetiology,
classification, and diagnosis of complex
disorders, such as schizophrenia, span
cultural and national boundaries,” he says.
“My take-home lessons are these:
Classification and diagnosis are complex,
interpretive and analytical tasks. These
tasks are more complex in cross-cultural
contexts, whether local (within the U.S.) or
global.
“Genetics and
neuroimaging may prove useful in simplifying
these tasks, but only if integrated with
clinical phenomenology – careful clinical
description based on patient narratives,
observation, and interpretation – to serve
the needs of embodied and enculturated
people, not disembodied brains or genomes.”
One major concern,
according to Robert, is how to
operationalize these philosophical and
ethical ideas in the development of new
diagnostic and classification manuals, such
as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual V
and the International Classification of
Disease – 11.
“While there is clearly
a commitment to embrace an integrative and
systems approach to mental illness in such
efforts, it remains to be seen how this will
affect the final products,” he says.
“A second major concern
is how to educate mental health care
professionals toward cultural competency in
ways that are sensitive to the dynamic,
constitutive nature of culture, rather than
merely presenting so-called facts about
‘this is what Native
Americans/Latinos/Ugandans believe about
this, that, and the other thing,’” Robert
says.
“We shouldn’t pretend
that culture is any easier to understand
than a person is; to understand that you
can’t have caricature of culture in mind.
What’s really critically important is
understanding cultures dynamically, as
complex, historic, social and political
structures that dramatically influence
people’s lives”
While Robert
acknowledges that it’s certainly the case
that DNA and brain scans are going to be
important, “if you ignore everything else,
you might never have the capacity to
actually influence the well-being of the
patient.”
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