Moral Attitudes & Mental Disorders

Hastings Center Report 32 (2):14-21 (2002)
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Abstract

When psychiatrists treat patients with mental disorders—when clinicians of any stripe have a “difficult patient”—they confront and must come to terms with the thought that the patient is morally responsible for his conduct. Taken to its extreme form, this attitude leads to a repudiation of the whole concept of mental illness. In a modest form, and held perpetually in tension with an objective, clinical stance toward mental disorders, it is an ineluctable part of the practice of psychiatry.

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Illness as Failure: Blaming Patients.Richard Gunderman - 2000 - Hastings Center Report 30 (4):7-11.

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