Article Text
Abstract
Psychiatry today is mainly practised within a curative framework. However, many mental disorders are persistent and negatively affect quality of life as well as life expectancy. This tension between treatment goals and the actual illness trajectory has evoked a growing academic interest in ‘palliative psychiatry’, namely the application of a palliative care approach in patients with severe persistent mental illness. Recently, Trachsel et al presented a working definition of palliative psychiatry. This first official attempt to capture the concept is based on WHO’s widely accepted definition of palliative care but modified and limited to include only severe persistent psychiatric illness. While this is a welcome step in the discussion on palliative care approaches in psychiatry, it also opens up for new questions. One of the most evident is whether psychiatry actually needs its own definition of palliative care or, put differently, whether there is something about mental disorders that differs so radically from other medical conditions that it calls for a separate definition. We acknowledge the need to discuss the goals of psychiatric care in patients with severe persistent psychiatric illness. However, we question whether a separate definition of palliative care exclusive to psychiatry is the right way to go. In this paper, we discuss why.
- end-of-life
- palliative care
- psychiatry
- mentally Ill and disabled persons
- quality/value of life/personhood
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Footnotes
Contributors All listed authors have contributed substantially to the planning, writing and revision of the manuscript, from draft to final version.
Funding For the work with this paper, AL has been supported by the Söderström Königska Foundation.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Not required.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Data sharing statement No additional data is available.
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Public knowledge and attitudes concerning palliative care
- Euthanasia embedded in palliative care. Responses to essentialistic criticisms of the Belgian model of integral end-of-life care
- Public interest in medical assistance in dying and palliative care
- What tools are available to identify patients with palliative care needs in primary care: a systematic literature review and survey of European practice
- Intensity and correlates of multidimensional problems in HIV patients receiving integrated palliative care in sub-Saharan Africa
- Life saving treatment for a “palliative care” patient
- More research is needed to understand how to provide optimal palliative dementia care to people living at home
- Effectiveness of a specialist palliative home care nurse–patient consultation followed by an interprofessional telephone case conference compared with usual care among patients with non-oncological palliative care needs: protocol for the multicentre KOPAL cluster-randomised controlled trial
- Current definitions of advanced multimorbidity: a protocol for a scoping review
- Palliative care for non-cancer conditions in primary care: a time trend analysis in the UK (2009–2014)