Hi IVI, I have no problem with patient negotiated treatment that isn't mandated and where full and truthful disclosure of the issues occurs. Even if that is psychiatric. There are however huge issues around doctor training in this area, and much of the training is based in part around privileging psychogenic explanations. Liaison psychiatry, or indeed any medical consulation, is problematic if the treating physicians are not sufficiently aware of the science, and if much of what they think is science is wrong.
There are numerous cases where treatment is mandated though, either directly or by subtle coersion. How prevalent is this? Prevalent enough that I hear about it regularly, though I cannot dispute that this could be from a selection bias as such cases are more likely to come to my attention.
I am not actually advocating an approach in a direct sense, which will become apparent over time. I am advocating a different view of the entire structure - almost a different paradigm. Action can come from that view.
I am also not advocating we select a narrow and specific advocacy approach. I think we need many approaches. In particular I want to separate out approaches that deal with the science, and approaches that deal with the politics. Within the politics, there are several subthemes. First is to cooperate for change, which is what you seem to be advocating IVI. Second, is pursuasion of those who can be reached ... more education than anything else. Third, is opposition to alternate political viewpoints that are not in our interest. That includes proponents of the (bio)psycho(social) model who are often advocating their approach as something similar to a panacea, whether overtly or by more subtle innuendo.
Its the science that will get us our change. Its the politics that determines how fast we get there.
I don't believe we should be using a carrot or a stick approach. We need to be more flexible than that. The goal is not to destroy psychiatry, nor even psychosomatic medicine, and neither is it to destroy their proponents. The goal is to change things so they are no longer broken and ineffective. That means that aspects of these things have to change, and change can involve opposition.
Mind you I would be surprised if in the long term psychosomatic medicine is held in even the low regard it is held now. As a subdiscipline it is dying, and rightly so in my view. It needs to change or perish. The biopsychosocial model was supposed to do that. Given that they just stuck a superficial image of bps on top of existing psychosomatic medicine without actually changing how things work, I doubt they can succeed. Indeed the evidence is that they are failing, though they are making headway in selling their approach to government, rather than establishing the science that would really justify it.
Bye, Alex