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Empire of Madness

Reimagining Western Mental Health Care for Everyone

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Empire of Madness

By: Khameer Kidia
Narrated by: Khameer Kidia
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An urgent rethinking of the Western approach to mental health, which treats the symptoms rather than the exploitative systems causing our distress—by a Rhodes Scholar and Harvard Medical School physician-anthropologist—offering lessons from the rest of the world.

What if the mainstay of mental health care involved cancelling onerous debt, giving poor people free housing, and paying reparations to the descendants of slavery and colonialism? In Empire of Madness, Dr. Khameer Kidia re-evaluates the Western approach to mental health, which medicates symptoms instead of changing the structures that harm the human psyche. A physician and researcher whose own family suffers from the psychological effects of colonialism, Kidia highlights the limitations of the Western mental health model by reporting from the front lines of mental health crises at home, in the clinic, and during a decade of fieldwork.

Clear-eyed and openhearted, Kidia asks the nuanced questions unaddressed by our current mental health model: How do history, culture, and politics shape mental distress? Are hoarding and burnout medical diagnoses or social problems? Why are schizophrenia outcomes sometimes better in poor countries without antipsychotics? Can a traditional healer treat mental illness better than a Western-trained clinician? For those living in poverty, can cash replace pills?

With rigorous research, cutting analysis, and illuminating prose, Kidia invites us to reimagine mental health as a global idea where our wellbeing is mutual and everyone’s voice—patients, caregivers, and healthcare workers alike—matters.
Mental Health Professionals & Academics Psychology & Mental Health Social Scientists & Psychologists Health
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So well written. I was expecting an informative book on mental health and colonialism. I did not expect it to be also a memoire gripping as good fiction. It has questioned who I am and who I want to be both as a professionist in the field and as a person. The necessary but western centred field of antipsychiatry, in the line of Basaglia, Foucault, Laing, Goffman and the others, has been for too long in need of this voice

sincere, informative, gripping

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