Publication | Closed Access
What’s in the ‘Treatment Gap’? Ethnographic Perspectives on Addiction and Global Mental Health from China, Russia, and the United States
32
Citations
38
References
2014
Year
East Asian StudiesMental IllnessesMental Health InterventionMental HealthUnited StatesSubstance Use DisordersMedical AnthropologyGlobal Mental HealthEthnographic PerspectivesHealth SciencesMental Health Services'Global Mental HealthPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentSubstance AbuseCommunity Mental HealthAddictionGlobal HealthCultural PsychiatryAnthropologySubstance AddictionMedicinePsychopathology
Recent years have seen the emergence of a 'global mental health' agenda, focused on providing evidence-based interventions for mental illnesses in low- and middle-income countries. Anthropologists and cultural psychiatrists have engaged in vigorous debates about the appropriateness of this agenda. In this article, we reflect on these debates, drawing on ethnographic fieldwork on the management of substance use disorders in China, Russia, and the United States. We argue that the logic of 'treatment gaps,' which guides much research and intervention under the rubric of global mental health, partially obscures the complex assemblages of institutions, therapeutics, knowledges, and actors framing and managing addiction (as well as other mental health issues) in any particular setting.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1