Titre :
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Challenging the Constraints of Neoliberalism and Biomedicalism : Repositioning Social Work in Mental Health (2022)
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Auteurs :
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Catrina Brown, Membre de l'équipe de recherche ;
Marjorie Johnstone, Membre de l'équipe de recherche ;
Nancy Ross, Membre de l'équipe de recherche ;
Kaitrin Doll, Membre de l'équipe de recherche
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Type de document :
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Article : texte imprimé
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Dans :
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Qualitative health research (vol. 32 n°5, April 2022)
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Article en page(s) :
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pp. 771-787
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Langues:
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Anglais
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Catégories :
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SANTE PUBLIQUE
SANTE COMMUNAUTAIRE
CANADA
DETERMINANT DE SANTE
SOINS DE SANTE
POPULATION DEFAVORISEE
SANTE MENTALE
SERVICE SOCIAL
TRAUMATISME PSYCHOLOGIQUE
CAPITALISME
USAGE DE DROGUES
MODELE BIOMEDICAL
STRUCTURE POLITIQUE
STRUCTURE SOCIOSANITAIRE
TRAVAIL SOCIAL
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Résumé :
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"This article explores the impact of neoliberalism and biomedicalism on social work mental health care practice through presenting the results of a Canadian provincial study which illustrates the experiences of social work service users, providers, and supervisors. While Canada has a universal health care program, the intensification of the free-market approach is evident in the shifts from public sector support to growing rationalization and marked cutbacks to the provision of social welfare services. The specific impact of neoliberal economic restraint on social justice in mental health services has pressured practitioners to adopt medicalized, short-term strategies, under efficiency-based models. The participants in this study reported significant co-occurring concerns with the state of mental health service delivery, and results suggest social work is increasingly co-opted by the conservative individualizing, pathologizing, and contextualizing dominant biomedical framework in the provision of mental health social services and lack of professional practice autonomy."
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Catalogueur :
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RESOdoc
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En ligne :
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https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/10497323211069681
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