A common idiomatic phrase in mental health care is "well known" client, patient, or service user. This phrase is often followed by "to mental health services" or some such, suggesting that a "service" can really know anything. Notwithstanding mental health services, especially public ones are a repository for a lot of information, such as facts about people, their service use, diagnosis, notes and assessments of various kinds; this conglomeration of information is not knowing, any more than a library may be "knowing". Knowing is a distinctly human activity. This paper will argue that this phrase is arrogant, a signifier of ignorance and ought to be relegated to history or back room banter with phrases like "frequent flyer", "bed seeker" and other derogatory and objectifying language.
Journal article
The myth of the well-known client
Issues in Mental Health Nursing, Vol.40(2), pp.191-193
2018
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- The myth of the well-known client
- Creators
- Richard Lakeman - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Issues in Mental Health Nursing, Vol.40(2), pp.191-193
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis Inc
- Identifiers
- 3759; 991012821283702368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Health; School of Health and Human Sciences; Nursing
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article