Depathologising sexualities in mental health services
Intended for healthcare professionals
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Depathologising sexualities in mental health services

Alec Grant Reader in narrative mental health, School of Health Sciences, University of Brighton
Jaime Naish Nursing student, University of Brighton
Laetitia Zeeman Senior lecturer in mental health, School of Health Sciences, University of Brighton

Alec Grant and colleagues explore heteronormative assumptions and practices in mental health that have a negative effect on patients from LGBTUI communities

The aim of this article is to critique heteronormative cultural assumptions that inform mental health practice, from the standpoint positions of ‘queer’ scholarship. Those assumptions regard heterosexuality as the desired cultural norm and thus negatively affect the wellbeing of people in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, undecided and intersex (LGBTUI) communities. It will be argued that LGBTUI experiences of stigma are understandable in the context of the way people are pathologised on the basis of those assumptions. The article concludes with a discussion of some emerging implications for mental health practice.

Mental Health Practice. 19, 7, 26-31. doi: 10.7748/mhp.19.7.26.s19

Correspondence

A.Grant@brighton.ac.uk

Peer review

This article has been subject to double-blind review and has been checked using antiplagiarism software

Conflict of interest

None declared

Received: 04 March 2015

Accepted: 12 June 2015

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