Russell Razzaque: Breaking Down Is Waking Up

Russell Razzaque: Breaking Down Is Waking Up

This week, we interview Dr Russell Razzaque. Dr Razzaque currently works as a consultant psychiatrist and associate medical director in east London and, together with colleagues, he is leading a pioneering multi-centre Open Dialogue pilot in the UK National Health Service.

In 2014 he released his book 'Breaking Down Is Waking Up' in which he explores alternative views of mental distress, their relationship to consciousness and comparisons to forms of spiritual awakening.

In this interview, we discuss the relationships between mindfulness, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Open Dialogue and how the UK NHS is approaching the worlds first randomised controlled trial of Open Dialogue interventions for people struggling with emotional or psychological distress.

In this episode we discuss:

  • What led Dr. Razzaque to his interest in psychiatry and in particular some of the more unconventional aspects of the profession.
  • How beginning to practice mindfulness nearly 20 years ago led to Russell starting to feel an incongruence between the dominant philosophy in psychiatry and what he was learning from his own mindfulness practices.
  • That the dominant philosophy is one of trying to help people remove their pain and remove them from difficult and uncomfortable experiences, but in his own personal development, he was learning to sit with the pain and finding that valuable.
  • How this led to an interest in novel therapeutic approaches like Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, originally pioneered by professor Stephen Hayes.
  • That Russell felt disillusioned with the way that UK mental health services and systems were organised and realised that creating better outcomes for people would require system-wide change.
  • How Russell came to be one of the leading figures in the worlds first multi-centre, fully randomised Open Dialogue Trial which seeks to establish the evidence base for Open Dialogue.
  • That the trial involves eight NHS Trusts across the UK and that several hundred practitioners have already been trained in Open Dialogue therapy.
  • That during the trial there will be randomly selected postcodes receiving Open Dialogue interventions compared with randomly selected postcodes receiving treatment as usual and that the results will be compared after three years.
  • That this trial will allow us to answer questions about the efficacy of Open Dialogue because we will have built a strong evidence base.
  • How colleagues have reacted to the Open Dialogue trial and why some might be threatened by the need to change.
  • That Open Dialogue is a need adapted approach, so it is not fundamentally against any of the conventional interventions, but it encourages people to make their own choices, so medication use tends to significantly reduce.
  • That it is necessary to change the power dynamic in current systems and approaches because the current methods lead to dependency, whereas Open Dialogue is about empowering and liberating the individual.
  • That Russell is encouraged to find that many psychiatrists are willing to open up to new ways of thinking about mental and emotional distress.
  • How spirituality and psychiatry can work hand-in-hand and how accepting spiritual explanations can sometimes lead to better understanding of personal experiences.
  • That, in future, the system needs to change such that interpersonal relationships are put first and are seen as the key to successful outcomes.
  • That we also need to adapt so that clinicians are trained to be present with distress and not just try to remove it.
  • How people can hear Russell speak at the upcoming Compassionate Mental Heath event in South Wales, being held on April 25th and 26th 2018.

Relevant links:

Russell Razzaque

Breaking Down is Waking Up

Open Dialogue trial

Developing Open Dialogue

Compassionate Mental Health

Jaksot(290)

The Poetics and Politics of Our Mental Health Metaphors: An Interview with Laurence Kirmayer

The Poetics and Politics of Our Mental Health Metaphors: An Interview with Laurence Kirmayer

Laurence Kirmayer is one of the most influential figures in cultural psychiatry today. A psychiatrist, researcher, and theorist, he serves as James McGill Professor and Director of the Division of Soc...

21 Touko 202537min

Kermit Cole: Dialogical Therapy and Quantum Theory Walk Into a Bar…

Kermit Cole: Dialogical Therapy and Quantum Theory Walk Into a Bar…

Hello, my name is Bob Whitaker, and today I have the pleasure of speaking with Kermit Cole. We'll be speaking about a philosophical enterprise that Kermit is now deeply engaged in. That is, broadly sp...

7 Touko 202536min

Chemically Imbalanced: Joanna Moncrieff on the Making and Unmaking of the Serotonin Myth

Chemically Imbalanced: Joanna Moncrieff on the Making and Unmaking of the Serotonin Myth

Welcome to this Mad in America podcast. My name is Robert Whitaker, and I'm happy today to have the pleasure of speaking with Joanna Moncrieff. Dr. Moncrieff is a psychiatrist who works in the Nationa...

30 Huhti 202549min

Teralyn Sell and Jenn Schmitz: Breaking Out of the Prison of Prescribing and Finding the Freedom of Therapy

Teralyn Sell and Jenn Schmitz: Breaking Out of the Prison of Prescribing and Finding the Freedom of Therapy

On the Mad in America podcast this week, Brooke Siem, author of May Cause Side Effects, talks with Teralyn Sell and Jenn Schmitz about their journey from working in the prison system to challenging co...

16 Huhti 202548min

Psychology's Small Stories and the Call of the Other: An Interview with David Goodman

Psychology's Small Stories and the Call of the Other: An Interview with David Goodman

David Goodman is the Director of the Center for Psychological Humanities and Ethics and the Dean of the Woods College of Advancing Studies at Boston College, where he also teaches in the Department ...

9 Huhti 202543min

Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics: End of an Era for Independent Journals? An Interview With Giovanni Fava

Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics: End of an Era for Independent Journals? An Interview With Giovanni Fava

Welcome to Mad In America Radio. My name is Bob Whitaker, and today my guest is Italian psychiatrist, Giovanni Fava. From 1992 to 2022, Dr. Fava edited the journal Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics. We...

26 Maalis 202540min

Psychology, Personhood, and the Crisis of Neoliberalism: Jeff Sugarman on Theoretical and Critical Psychology

Psychology, Personhood, and the Crisis of Neoliberalism: Jeff Sugarman on Theoretical and Critical Psychology

Jeff Sugarman is a distinguished scholar in theoretical and philosophical psychology, known for his work examining the psychology of selfhood, human agency, and the sociopolitical underpinnings of psy...

19 Maalis 202553min

"Dad, Something's Not Right. I Need Help"- Richard Fee on the Dangers of Adderall

"Dad, Something's Not Right. I Need Help"- Richard Fee on the Dangers of Adderall

Welcome to the Mad in America podcast. My name is Brooke Siem, and I'm the author of May Cause Side Effects. Today, I'm here with Rick Fee, president of the Richard Fee Foundation. Rick joins us to ta...

5 Maalis 202547min

Suosittua kategoriassa Terveys ja hyvinvointi

unicast
tiedenaiset-podcast
psykopodiaa-podcast
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
rss-pitaisko-erota
vakeva-elama-viisaampi-mieli-vahvempi-keho
meditaatiot-suomeksi
junnut-pelissa
rss-mighty-finland-podcast
puhu-muru
rss-narsisti
terapiassa
paritellen
aamukahvilla
mielen-puolikkaat
rss-uplevel-by-sonja-hannus
rss-pt-paahtio
rss-vapaudu-voimaasi
rss-adama-mindful-hetki
rss-nautinto