Affiliation:
1. Bronx Municipal Hospital, Bronx, New York
Abstract
The psychiatric consultant requires a broad understanding of the context of consultation to supplement his knowledge of psychodynamics. The authors propose viewing the medical ward in the model of a “quasi-open community,” in which a culture is transmitted from one generation of personnel to the next through a ward mythology-which embodies ideals, for example, for the roles of Nurse and Doctor. Requests for psychiatric consultation often result from the partial breakdown in this mythology; the consultant's immediate task is to reconstruct group ideals and facilitate community re-unification in order to promote the recovery of patients. Later on, when the staff has had a chance to distance itself from the threat to its solidarity, the consultant can help the ward community understand both the adaptive and non-adaptive aspects of its own mythology. Case examples illustrate how respecting the quasi-open character of the medical ward and giving credence to its mythology can promote the reconstitution of ward communities in disarray and aid individual patients as well.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
17 articles.
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