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Published Online: 1 May 2011

Personal Recovery and Mental Illness: A Guide for Mental Health Professionals

Based on: Personal Recovery and Mental Illness: A Guide for Mental Health Professionals Slade Mike; New York, Cambridge University Press, 2009, 288 pages, $68
Did you ever consider, as a mainstream provider, that you were inadvertently doing harm, that your treatments were toxic, that you were treating symptoms rather than people, or that your work might be categorized with Nazi atrocities, the slave trade, and Apartheid? If not, then you will not likely be convinced by this book's claims that recovery will solve most of the problems with modern mental health services. The author, a psychologist and health services researcher at King's College London, while arguing five rationales for recovery (epistemological, ethical, effectiveness, empowerment, and policy) rails against current practices, in particular medications. As he describes the replacement of first- by second-generation antipsychotics, “The winners from this arrangement are pharmaceutical companies, who make more money, and those who prescribe, whose status is enhanced. The losers are patients.”
The book illuminates an innovative, promising, and well-researched model of treatment, personal recovery, but the straw man of mainstream psychiatry provides much of the fuel for its flame. In the process, it caricatures psychiatry, and I envisioned a cabal of pill-pushers hunting out opportunities to subordinate marginalized people. The book, while distancing itself in principle from the antipsychiatry movement, intimates that the real problems are not mental illnesses or symptoms but psychiatric diagnoses and treatments. Yet I doubt that any mainstream provider would disavow the tenets of recovery, such as that “People with severe mental illness are people” and that the primary goal is “better mental health, regardless of mental illness.” Almost everyone I know who works in mental health tries to live up to these ideals. Yet the author seems convinced that they are antithetical to mainstream practice. The book seeks to convince, crystallize, and catalyze thoughts around the theme of recovery, but it tacitly works to dismantle and undermine the current system, too.
The book sustains a surprisingly prescriptive tone, using lengthy bulleted lists and tables to enumerate all the steps needed to restructure services and change interactions with patients. It would be impossible to follow a large number of these suggestions for improving mental health services. The case studies (largely from Australia and Europe) are interesting and inspiring but often do not map well onto systems and practices in the United States. Many of these recovery-based programs incorporate mainstream approaches, too, and they seem to work well in concert, which raises the question of why we need a reversal of many clinical assumptions to make progress.
When I was a resident, I met Mark Ragins, M.D., and was inspired by his accounts of engaging people sincerely and creatively and his vision of recovery. He made me want to use recovery approaches as a way to become a better psychiatrist. This book posited me instead as part of an intractable problem, the old guard that awaits overthrow. Readers who are already convinced of the insensitivity and illogic of the status quo will find this book a touchstone and call to arms, but those who hope to make incremental improvements will be put off by its antagonism.
The reviewer reports no competing interests.

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Cover: The Lee Shore, by Edward Hopper, 1941. Oil on canvas, 28 × 43 inches. Private collection. Photo © Art Resource, New York.
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 569

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Published online: 1 May 2011
Published in print: May 2011

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Stephen Thielke, M.D., M.S.P.H.
Dr. Thielke is with the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, and the Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Puget Sound Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Seattle.

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