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The cultural products analysis in medicine and psychiatry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

F. Pavez*
Affiliation:
Hospital General Universitario Reina Sofía, Psychiatry, Murcia, Spain
A. Alcántara
Affiliation:
Hospital General Universitario Reina Sofía, Psychiatry, Murcia, Spain
E. Saura
Affiliation:
Fundación Jesús Abandonado, Unidad de Asistencia Psicológica, Murcia, Spain
G. Pérez
Affiliation:
Departamento de Historia y Ciencias de la Música, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Universidad de Granada, Murcia, Spain
P. Marset
Affiliation:
Unidad Docente de Historia de la Medicina, Departamento de Ciencias Sociosanitarias, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Murcia, Murcia, Spain
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

As the psychopathological constructs have been influenced by scientific and cultural paradigms of its time, culture reflects and determines the way of understanding health and disease. The knowledge generated is integrated to the cultural wealth and it continues its development by interacting with culture, thus the ideas of mental illness and its treatment vary according to culture and beliefs of a given population in a given time.

Objectives

To propose a framework for analysis through the examination of cultural products. We argue that this strategy can give us some clues about how the general population understands mental illness and the psychiatric work.

Methods

A review of the literature available about social representations of science, medicine, illness and psychiatry, through cultural products analysis.

Results

There are many works that address the presence of these issues in the social imaginary by analyzing cultural products. In the field of psychiatry, the analysis of films, literature and music (the last, in a lesser extent) are the most frequent.

Conclusions

The analysis of cultural products can be a source of additional knowledge that connects us with the social representations of our profession and its scope of practice, favoring a better understanding about what psychiatry and mental illness means for our patients and general population.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EW170
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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