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Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health

Felicity Thomas and Richard Byng - Poverty, Pathology and Pills

Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health

Mad in America

Mental Health, Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.7212 Ratings

🗓️ 12 June 2019

⏱️ 65 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On MIA Radio this week, MIA's Tim Beck interviewed Dr. Felicity Thomas and Dr. Richard Byng. Dr. Thomas is a Senior Research Fellow in the Medical School and a Senior Research Fellow on the Cultural Contexts of Health in the College of Humanities at the University of Exeter. She is also a co-director (with Professor Mark Jackson) of the WHO Collaborating Centre on Culture and Health and works closely with the WHO Regional Office for Europe project on the Cultural Contexts of Health.

Dr. Byng is a professor in primary care research at the University of Plymouth. Dr. Byng is also trained as a general practitioner with a particular interest in mental health care. Over the last 20 years, he has worked on various large-scale research projects related to access, commissioning, inter-professional working and implementation of evidence-based practice, while publishing extensively on topics related to the social contexts of health and professional care.

Together, Dr. Thomas and Dr. Byng have contributed to the DeSTRESS project, which consists of a team of researchers in the United Kingdom who seek to learn about why and how poverty-related issues have become increasingly pathologized. This includes exploring how high levels of antidepressant prescription and use are impacting people's health and wellbeing in low-income communities in southwest England.

Their final report published in April 2019, entitled Poverty, Pathology, and Pills, situates increasing rates of mental health diagnosis and psychiatric prescriptions within socioeconomic and policy trends across the UK. An overarching conclusion of this research was that there is a need to reconceptualize the way that health professionals respond to poverty-related distress. This requires a response that recognizes the bio-psycho-social and reduces pressures on general practitioners (GPs) to make rapid decisions around diagnosing and prescribing.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Madden America podcast, your source for science, psychiatry, and social justice.

0:13.4

Hello, my name is Tim Beck, and I'm a news reporter for Madden America.

0:18.0

I'm pleased to have with me today Dr. Felicity Thomas and Dr. Richard Bing.

0:22.6

Dr. Thomas is a senior research fellow in the medical school and a senior research fellow on the

0:28.3

cultural context of health in the College of Humanities at the University of Exeter. And Dr. Bing is a

0:34.8

professor in primary care research at University of Plymouth.

0:38.3

Dr. Bing is also trained as a general practitioner with a special interest in mental health care.

0:44.3

Together, Dr. Thomas and Dr. Bing are part of the Distress Project, which, according to their website,

0:50.3

consists of a team of researchers in the United Kingdom who seek to learn about

0:55.2

why and how poverty-related issues have become increasingly pathologized. This includes exploring

1:01.3

how high levels of antidepressant prescriptions and use are impacting people's health and

1:06.7

well-being in low-income communities in southwest England. Their recent report published in April

1:12.3

2019, titled Poverty, Pathology, and Pills, situates increasing rates of mental health

1:18.8

diagnosis and psychotropic prescription within socioeconomic and policy trends across the UK.

1:25.8

An overarching conclusion of this research was that there is a need

1:29.1

to reconceptualize the way that health professionals respond to poverty-related distress.

1:35.2

This requires a response that recognizes the biopsychosocial and reduces pressures on general

1:41.0

practitioners to make rapid decisions around diagnosis and prescribing. So welcome,

1:47.1

both of you. Thank you for joining me today. Thank you very much. So if you don't mind,

1:52.0

we'll just go ahead and jump right into the questions. So just to get started, can you each talk a

1:56.2

little bit about your personal histories and research backgrounds? So I've got quite a diverse research background.

2:02.6

I started off working in anthropology and geography, but I've then moved on to work in international

...

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