Repetition, acting out, and the clinical anchor point in emergency psychiatric services
Type de matériel :
80
In a society where speed and efficiency are paramount, what distinguishes psychiatric emergency services? How does one deal with psychotic patients who consult repeatedly and who are sometimes violent toward themselves or toward teams? What kind of intervention can be provided when subjects are caught in a repetitive cycle that keeps taking them back to the position of a disposable object that they feel themselves to occupy? Ophelia is a young woman who is well known to psychiatric institutions. She presents herself at emergency services several times a week and is repeatedly placed under observation because of her suicidal tendencies. However, she quickly ends up being blacklisted by most closed psychiatric wards in Brussels. After one year, an anchor point finally emerges for her, with one of the emergency services of the city: weekly follow-ups are set in place; her relation to the body and to the Other is somewhat appeased. Thus, in light of clinical practice in psychiatric emergency services, repetition and acting out are not necessarily antagonistic to the construction of anchor points.
Réseaux sociaux