Kaori Wada - How Grief Became a Disorder and What This Means About Us

Kaori Wada - How Grief Became a Disorder and What This Means About Us

In March 2022, a new grief-related disorder was officially adopted into mainstream mental health diagnosis nomenclature. Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) is a recent addition to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual fifth edition text revision (DSM-5-TR). A PGD diagnosis is to be used when a person is grieving too long and too intensely.

In this interview, Kaori Wada, Psychologist, grief researcher, and Associate Professor and Director of Training at the University of Calgary, builds upon her recent paper on the Medicalization of Grief in conversation with MIA Science News Writer and Psychologist Zenobia Morrill. Wada articulates a history of institutional tensions and financial conflicts behind the creation of this new PGD diagnosis. She also discusses the ways PGD could shape how we collectively understand and respond to those grieving.

Wada's work demonstrates that the creation of PGD was not based on scientific findings but appears to be entangled in long-standing arguments between camps of mental health professionals with different stakes in whether the diagnosis became legitimized. Further, PGD, as with other diagnoses, represents elements of mainstream psychological theory that tend to render deviations from Western cultural norms as "unhealthy." Is diagnosis needed to provide support and care? If so, those most likely to experience marginalization, violence, and unjust loss are also most likely to be classified as having PGD, a mental illness.

At a time when the world is fraught with tragic loss—owing to causes ranging from political failures, state violence, and the COVID-19 pandemic—grieving has been transformed into a mental health disorder. But the complicated question of what a mental disorder is continues to be glossed over. The opportunity for psychiatric professionals to embrace humility seems to have reverted to the familiar "diagnose-and-treat" response. Will pharmacological intervention become the dominant "treat" response to a diagnosis of PGD?

A new grief disorder is a clear departure, however, from the way grief used to be described in the field as an example of something that is clearly not a mental health disorder, Wada shared. She exclaims: "To me, the medicalization of grief is controversial because it may fundamentally shake up the concept of a mental disorder, [how it has] been defined and understood."

Wada and Morrill explore what this new PGD diagnosis may mean, reflecting on the ways the "diagnose-and-treat" logic seems to of experiences formerly considered part of the territory of being human. The need to pathologize experiences in order to address them represents a paradox. A new ethical and moral quandary befalls professionals tasked with determining when grief is an illness and when expressions of grief are inappropriate.

Will the public embrace this new disorder? Will the medicalization of grief be resisted? Will a pandemic of PGD diagnoses follow a global pandemic? Wada speaks to the personal and professional influences that shaped these curiosities and her approach to researching how grief is being construed in the mental health field.

Avsnitt(293)

Why Psychosis Is Not So Crazy: A Conversation with Stijn Vanheule

Why Psychosis Is Not So Crazy: A Conversation with Stijn Vanheule

Stijn Vanheule is a clinical psychologist, psychoanalyst, and professor of psychology at Ghent University. Trained in the Lacanian tradition, he has written widely on the structure of psychosis, the l...

25 Juni 202544min

A Therapist Navigating Antidepressant Withdrawal: Nelson Lee on the Power of the Present Moment

A Therapist Navigating Antidepressant Withdrawal: Nelson Lee on the Power of the Present Moment

Nelson Lee is a therapist and mental skills coach with a master's degree in clinical mental health counseling and an MBA. In 2024, he attempted to get off antidepressants that he'd been on for 15 year...

11 Juni 202546min

"Progress Only Occurs when People Make Demands" Paolo del Vecchio Reflects on a Life of Federal Service

"Progress Only Occurs when People Make Demands" Paolo del Vecchio Reflects on a Life of Federal Service

Paulo del Vecchio is a person in long-term recovery from mental health and addictions, who has been a leader in the peer recovery movement for 40 years. He recently completed a 30-year career at the U...

4 Juni 202539min

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 Maj 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 Maj 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 Apr 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 Apr 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 Apr 202543min

Populärt inom Hälsa

somna-med-henrik
rss-bara-en-till-om-missbruk-medberoende-2
rss-jossan-nina
inga-beiga-morsor
angestpodden
alska-oss
not-fanny-anymore
johannes-hansen-podcast
sexnoveller-deluxe
rss-vuxna-pa-latsas
rss-viktmedicinpodden
sa-in-i-sjalen
brottarbroder
sova-med-dan-horning
rss-sjalsligt-avkladd
rss-the-house-podcast-3
tyngre-radio
smartare-fitness-podden
rss-basta-livet
rss-the-house-podcast-4