User Tools

Site Tools


471g4:questions:471g4--week_11_day_2

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
471g4:questions:471g4--week_11_day_2 [2021/11/03 23:09] 97.73.81.167471g4:questions:471g4--week_11_day_2 [2021/11/04 11:52] (current) 76.78.225.150
Line 15: Line 15:
 Submitted by Lyndsey Clark. I pledge… Submitted by Lyndsey Clark. I pledge…
  
 +
 +1) On page xi, Tone states a point that we've been trying to make over the course of this class… "How has it [anxiety] been described, interpreted, and treated has varied across time and place. Consequently, we must resist the temptation to impost modern understandings of anxiety onto the past. . ." Keeping this in mind, what do we see happening similarly in Tone's reading as our modern understanding of anxiety?
 +
 +2) Throughout the chapter "Psychiatry in the Medicine Cabinet," the author speaks about the rise of psychopharmacology. In the past, the treatment of mentally ill patients was done in a facility, but after the trend of deinstitutionalization, many patients were out in the world again (80). Do you think that the massive popularity and "pharmaceutical optimism" towards psychopharmacology products created a "healthier" population of people or not?
 +
 +(Submitted by Carson Berrier - I pledge...)
 +
 +1.Why did Americans propagandize that the drug problem was the result of foreign interference or marginalized men? Why do you think they were seeking to explain away the crisis in this way?
 +
 +2. Why do you think the medical community could never reach a consensus about the risks and benefits of drugs like benzodiazepines? If the community had vested interest in promoting the medications, why wasn’t there more of an effort to coalesce.
 +
 +Submitted by Jack Kurz. I pledge...
 +
 +1.) In the preface of Tones' reading, she mentions how we as a society should be wary about how we approach anxiety; "Consequently, we must resist the temptation to impose modern understanding of anxiety onto the past lest we flatten the chronological particularities that make history meaningful." (xi). Why do you think that is important whilst discussing anxiety in the past in general? 
 +
 +2.) In the Anatomy of an Epidemic, Whitaker highlights how the disarray of psychiatry is a form of an epidemic on its own by fueling the disabling of mental disorders. Would it be safe to assume that, rather than claiming to make progress in regards to labeling and treating mental illnesses, are we still stuck trying to complete the puzzle? Does the lack of a proper psychiatric approach to mental illnesses make this epidemic even worse, or rather the lack of proper treatment; something that is not new? 
 +
 +Submitted by Erica Banks. I pledge...
 +
 +1. With Thorazine, Adderall, and other medications proving effective against schizophrenia and ADHD symptoms, can we officially say that Foucault was wrong? Perhaps one could argue that the societal pressure to "take" pills to overcome their symptoms is a form of societal control, but even that might be too generous. What does the class think?
 +
 +2. Are mental health drug manufacturers responsible for their drugs' addictive qualities to the same degree that opioid manufacturers are? Chapters 8 and 9 explain that people, especially women are over-targeted for medications. Is this practice similarly predatory? 
 +
 +Submitted by Theron Gertz. I pledge...
471g4/questions/471g4--week_11_day_2.1635980955.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/11/03 23:09 by 97.73.81.167