The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of Support

This paper presents the personal narrative of the author, an individual who has experienced personal and clinical recovery from mental health difficulties. Diagnosed with a mental disorder (NEUROTIC; ICD-10) during my university years, I endured cognitive dysfunction, panic disorder, derangement of...

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Main Author: Hideki Muramatsu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Beryl Institute 2024-11-01
Series:Patient Experience Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pxjournal.org/journal/vol11/iss3/4
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author Hideki Muramatsu
author_facet Hideki Muramatsu
author_sort Hideki Muramatsu
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description This paper presents the personal narrative of the author, an individual who has experienced personal and clinical recovery from mental health difficulties. Diagnosed with a mental disorder (NEUROTIC; ICD-10) during my university years, I endured cognitive dysfunction, panic disorder, derangement of ego, suicidal ideation, and depression. Despite these challenges, I have actively engaged in social skills training, supervised virtual reality content, led self-help groups, and published papers on my experiences. I will discuss my own experiences as an expert-by-experience and describe the tendencies of professional ableism consciousness that I encountered during my journey of recovery. Through the lens of my recovery journey, I describe the difference between professionals with a strong ableism mindset and those with a weak ableism mindset. To mitigate ableism, mental health professionals must confront their own biases, as seen in training analyses. They also require an enhanced understanding of recovery and a shift toward recovery orientation. My story underscores the importance of a cautious and humble approach that does not evaluate human superiority or inferiority in the context of ableism. I hope that the readers of this paper will be inspired to think about professional ableism and move in the direction of shaping public opinion toward a decrease in ableism.
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spelling doaj-art-e3b5af7cd32a442091aa77e8332d38602025-01-08T20:21:44ZengThe Beryl InstitutePatient Experience Journal2372-02472024-11-0111310.35680/2372-0247.1987The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of SupportHideki MuramatsuThis paper presents the personal narrative of the author, an individual who has experienced personal and clinical recovery from mental health difficulties. Diagnosed with a mental disorder (NEUROTIC; ICD-10) during my university years, I endured cognitive dysfunction, panic disorder, derangement of ego, suicidal ideation, and depression. Despite these challenges, I have actively engaged in social skills training, supervised virtual reality content, led self-help groups, and published papers on my experiences. I will discuss my own experiences as an expert-by-experience and describe the tendencies of professional ableism consciousness that I encountered during my journey of recovery. Through the lens of my recovery journey, I describe the difference between professionals with a strong ableism mindset and those with a weak ableism mindset. To mitigate ableism, mental health professionals must confront their own biases, as seen in training analyses. They also require an enhanced understanding of recovery and a shift toward recovery orientation. My story underscores the importance of a cautious and humble approach that does not evaluate human superiority or inferiority in the context of ableism. I hope that the readers of this paper will be inspired to think about professional ableism and move in the direction of shaping public opinion toward a decrease in ableism.https://pxjournal.org/journal/vol11/iss3/4patient experienceexpert-by-experiencequality of carepatient-centered careableismmental health
spellingShingle Hideki Muramatsu
The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of Support
Patient Experience Journal
patient experience
expert-by-experience
quality of care
patient-centered care
ableism
mental health
title The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of Support
title_full The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of Support
title_fullStr The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of Support
title_full_unstemmed The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of Support
title_short The "ableism'' behind Mental Health Professionals' Perceptions of Support
title_sort ableism behind mental health professionals perceptions of support
topic patient experience
expert-by-experience
quality of care
patient-centered care
ableism
mental health
url https://pxjournal.org/journal/vol11/iss3/4
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