Article ID: CBB333991073

Teaching ‘Small and Helpless’ Women How to Live: Dialectical Behaviour Therapy in Sweden, ca 1995–2005 (2018)

unapi

In 1995, a Swedish pilot study of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) was launched to investigate its therapeutic efficacy and cost-effectiveness as treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) in suicidal women. In the same year, a sweeping reform of psychiatric care commenced, dramatically reducing the number of beds by the end of the decade. The psychiatry reform was presented as an important factor prompting the need for a community-based treatment for Borderline patients. This article suggests that the introduction of DBT in Sweden, and its relationship to the reform, can only be adequately explained with reference to the wider political shift occurring at the time, whereby the Swedish welfare state and its guiding ethos of egalitarianism were abandoned in favour of a neoliberal ‘choice revolution’. With the new liberalism, hard work and individual responsibility replaced the idea of a Swedish ‘people’s home’, a nationwide community and social support network. This language was reflected in DBT, which sought to teach patients the ‘skills’ necessary ‘to create a life worth living’. In this context, therapy was constituted as a form of ‘work’ that the patient had to undertake to improve. Moreover, DBT rejected the prevailing view of Borderline patients as ‘manipulative’ and ‘aggressive’, suggesting instead that they were ‘helpless’, ‘weak’ and unable to regulate their emotions. This new Borderline persona fit neatly into the new liberal discourse: she could be taught to become a rational and independent person able to cope in a society that valued individual responsibility over social support.

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Article Sarah Marks (2018) Psychotherapy in Europe. History of the Human Sciences (pp. 3-12). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB333991073/

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Authors & Contributors
Jones, David W.
Gnoth, Mareike
Streng, Marcel
Glaesmer, Heide
Matza, Tomas
Hide, Louise
Journals
History of Psychiatry
Social History of Medicine
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
History of Psychology
Publishers
Routledge
University of Illinois at Chicago
University of Chicago Press
Pickering & Chatto
Duke University Press
Cornell University Press
Concepts
Mental disorders and diseases
Psychiatry
Women and health
Women
Psychotherapy
Therapeutic practice; therapy; treatment
People
Kokyo, Nakamura
Laing, Ronald David
Griesinger, Wilhelm
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
Early modern
20th century, early
17th century
19th century
Places
United States
England
Germany
Amsterdam (Netherlands)
Georgia (U.S.)
London (England)
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