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Comments, Critique, and Inspiration Column

The Myth of the Well-Known Client

, DipNsg, BN, BA Hons, MMH (psychotherapy), DNSci, FACMHN
Pages 191-193 | Published online: 22 May 2018
 

ABSTRACT

A common idiomatic phrase in mental health care is “well known” client, patient, or service user. This phrase is often followed by “to mental health services” or some such, suggesting that a “service” can really know anything. Notwithstanding mental health services, especially public ones are a repository for a lot of information, such as facts about people, their service use, diagnosis, notes and assessments of various kinds; this conglomeration of information is not knowing, any more than a library may be “knowing”. Knowing is a distinctly human activity. This paper will argue that this phrase is arrogant, a signifier of ignorance and ought to be relegated to history or back room banter with phrases like “frequent flyer”, “bed seeker” and other derogatory and objectifying language.

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