The Medicalisation of Distress

The Medicalisation of Distress

Diagnosis, Formulation, and Relational Psychotherapy

NOW CLOSED

Saturday 4 March 2023

A live webinar or In Person event with keynote speaker Dr Nancy McWilliams, with James Barnes, James Davies, and Lucy Johnstone 

CPD Credits: 4.5 hours

  • Attend live webinar OR in person at Confer’s premises (Please see our FAQ)
  • Includes a subtitled recording of the event and a transcript, with access for a year (14 days post the event)
  • Bookings close at 9:00am GMT Wednesday 1 March

In the US and UK — and increasingly the rest of the world — our language, thinking, and responses to emotional and psychological distress have become almost completely framed in medical terms in the last few decades.

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FULL PROGRAMME

13.00 GMT
Registration and Coffee (attending in person only)

13.30
Introductions

13.40
Dr Nancy McWilliams
Diagnosis for Therapy’s Sake: Inferential and dimensional assessment of psychological suffering

Dr. McWilliams will review her involvement over many years in trying to articulate and preserve clinically relevant ways of understanding people and their psychological problems. She argues that in recent decades, diagnostic taxonomies have reflected the interests of insurance companies, pharmaceutical corporations, governmental cost-cutters, and some academic researchers more fully than the needs of patients and clinicians. Despite empirical evidence that what matters most for therapy outcome are personality and relationship factors, contemporary diagnostic conventions have lent themselves to treatment that is increasingly objectifying and impersonal. She offers the Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual (PDM-2) as an example of a clinically oriented classification system that is dimensional, inferential, and contextual.

14.30
Q&A

14.45
Break

15.00
Dr James Davies
Mental Health, Capitalism, and the Sedated of a Nation

Why has the medical model continued to expand and dominate mental health provision and public discourse while presiding over poor outcomes since its ascendancy in the 1980/90s? Why does this model continue to spread and institutionally thrive? Whose interests does it really serve: people in need or the deeper interests of our political economy? This seminar will propose some potential answers.

15.45
Q&A

16.00
Lucy Johnstone
The Power Threat Meaning Framework: a conceptual alternative to diagnosis

The Power Threat Meaning Framework is a co-produced document published by the British Psychological Society in 2018. It offers an alternative to models based on psychiatric diagnosis by demonstrating the links between wider social factors such as poverty, discrimination and inequality, along with traumas such as abuse and violence, and the resulting emotional distress. The Framework can be used as a way of helping people to create more hopeful narratives about their lives and their difficulties, instead of seeing themselves as blameworthy, weak, deficient or ‘mentally ill’. Our speaker will briefly outline its core principles.

16.45
Q&A

16.45
Q&A

17.15
James Barnes
The relational model in psychotherapy and the challenge to the medical model.

James Barnes will talk about the relational model in psychotherapy and the problems this poses for the medical model. He will suggest that the inherent individualism of the medical model not only makes it incompatible with relational thinking, but that the evident need for relational thinking means that the medical model has run its course. In response to the 1980s and the biomedical shift in psychiatry, psychoanalysis and psychotherapy turned relational. It is this model that should have won the day, he will argue, and it is this model that needs to be at the forefront of change going forward.

17.45
Q&A

17.55
Break

18.00
Panel Session and Q&A

18.30
End

FEES

Bookings close at 9:00am GMT Wednesday 1 March

Live Webinar:

£80 (Member £64)
(Click here to become a member)

Includes a recording of the event.

In person at venue:

£130 (Member £104)
(Click here to become a member)

Includes refreshments a recording of the event.

CPD

Certificates of attendance for 4.5 hours will be provided.

To receive the full CPD credits, you are required to attend 100% of the live event. No partial credit will be given.

Please note that if you are unable to attend all of the live event, you will need to undertake our event specific test in order to receive the CPD certification. This will be made available soon after the live event has taken place.

VENUE

Live webinarZoom

Zoom is free to download and use.

For more information about Zoom click here.

To download Zoom free of charge click here.

In person:

Confer
Strype Street
London
E1 7LQ
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SCHEDULE

Saturday
13.00 GMT Registration and Coffee (attending in person only)
13.30 Introductions
13.40 Dr Nancy McWilliams
14.30 Q&A
14.45 Break
15.00 Dr James Davies
15.45 Q&A
16.00 Lucy Johnstone
16.45 Q&A
17.00 Break
17.15 James Barnes
17.45 Q&A
17.55 Break
18.00 Panel Session and Q&A
18.30 End

BOOKING CONDITIONS

Regrettably, refunds cannot be given in any circumstances except as follows:

  • You cancel in writing to info@confer.uk.com 60 days before the first date of the event you have booked, in which case you will be entitled to a 100% refund.
  • You cancel in writing to info@confer.uk.com 30 days before the first date of the event you have booked, in which case you will be entitled to a 50% refund.

This does not apply to parts of an event such as a seminar within a series but only to a whole event or complete series. You may give your place to another person if you let us know that person's name at least 24 hours before the event begins.

We reserve the right to change a speaker at one of our conferences without offering a refund. However, if a solo presenter cancels we will offer a full refund OR transfer of your fee to another Confer event. If the entire event is cancelled we will offer you a full refund.

We reserve the right to change our prices at any time. Regrettably, discounts offered after you made your booking cannot be claimed or applied retrospectively.