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Original Articles

What's so funny? Towards a client perspective on professionals' use of humour in drug treatment

Pages 263-271 | Received 18 Jul 2014, Accepted 03 Feb 2015, Published online: 16 Mar 2015
 

Abstract

A popular notion refers to laughter as “the best medicine,” and a stream of psychological research encourages treatment providers to use humour as a therapeutic tool. However, remarkably few studies have investigated client perspectives on professionals' use of humour in everyday practice. Drawing on ethnographic data from fieldwork in two Danish drug treatment institutions for young people, this paper begins to fill this gap in the existing research. Analyzing the use of humour in naturally occurring, informal situations wherein professionals joke, use irony and tell funny stories, this paper suggests that the use of humour by professionals – despite their allegedly good intentions – may at times be problematic, even offensive for clients. Furthermore, as the young people who turn to drug treatment are socially vulnerable and dependent on the professionals, the paper illuminates how they find their opportunities for objecting to the professionals' use of humour limited. The paper concludes that professionals should handle humour with care, rather than viewing it as a benign, risk-free addition to treatment, and that future research must tackle the methodological challenges of exploring client perspectives with respect to how professionals use humour in institutional settings characterized by asymmetrical power relations.

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank the professionals and the young people who allowed me to participate in drug treatment, and Dr Sébastien Tutenges who gave me the idea to pursue the topic of humor. I would also like to thank the editor Dr Amy Pennay, the three anonymous reviewers of Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy and Dr Stefan Bastholm Andrade for insightful and valuable comments.

Declaration of interest

This study was made possible by a grant from Aarhus University. The author reports no conflict of interest.

Notes

1ADHD is an acronym referring to Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. In Danish slang, it is generally used to describe something or someone as hyper or overcharged.

2A dystopian novel of a totalitarian regime published in 1949.

3Given that professionals' use of humor is not a commonly discussed theme, I suspect that most people initially would find it challenging to convey their experience hereof in great details.

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