Dissociative disorders

Primal Fear

Last week’s review of Apag seems to have been a hit with you, dear web readers. And when you’re onto a winner…

What to watch this weekend

I’ve been sick in bed a lot of this week, not up to much other than watching Netflix. And it predicted my interests with scary accuracy. It seems to know that I enjoy caring for detainees with mental health problems! Cue a review of Primal Fear

Who killed the Bishop?

Released back in the mid-90s, this great film starring Richard Gere and a young Edward Norton is now almost 30 years old. Yet the issues at its heart are still red hot relevant to the criminal justice system.

Long story short: a vulnerable young man is found covered in a much-loved bishop’s blood, and the prosecution is gunning for the death penalty. But the hot shot defence lawyer doesn’t think he did it. He enlists the help of a non-forensic psychologist who decides that he’s got split personality disorder and that likely he killed the (it turns out paedophilic) bishop whilst in a dissociative state. Cue lots of courtroom drama and everyone coming to be convinced that the poor lad is ‘mad’ rather than ‘bad’. But is there even more to it than that?

I won’t spoil the ending of this film for you. It’s thought provoking, well acted and not too incredible from a medical point of view. So do watch it! But I would like to just leave you with this reflection…

Forensic psychiatry

It’s really vital that healthcare professionals interacting with the criminal justice system stick within their fields of expertise. I’m a prison GP who happens to know a lot of general psychiatry. But that doesn’t make me a consultant psychiatrist, yet alone a forensic psychiatrist. Similarly, psychiatrists and psychologists may know a lot about their niche fields within mental health, but that doesn’t make them experts in - as is needed in this film - personality disorders and their interplay with serious crime. No, such cases require forensic psychiatrists - doctors who deal with the interaction between mental illness and the law.

In so many lands, we lack appreciation of the very fact of mental illness. Health systems lack sufficient numbers of even basically trained psychiatrists, yet alone highly trained forensic ones. Prison doctors, if they exist at all, are insufficiently versed in general psychiatry. And so many nations’ legal systems fail to make any allowance for the indisputable fact that severe mental illness - including psychological trauma such as child sexual abuse - is a major factor in many crimes. As a result, countless people languish untreated in prison rather than receiving the help they so desperately need… and yes, a very few guilty folk are able to manipulate well-meaning non-experts.

So folks, let’s take every opportunity to fly the flag for forensic psychiatry.

Until next week.

Dr Rachael Pickering is our Chief Medical Officer

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Mental Health Awareness Week

To mark Mental Health Awareness Week 2021, we are releasing a short audio edit taken from a mental health training video series currently in production. This training is aimed at christian healthcare professionals and will be delivered during our formal training courses. However we feel that whether you’re a healthcare professional or not, you might benefit from learning about today’s chosen topic - dissociative disorders - which are a less widely known and often misunderstood mental health problem.

Listen below as one of our volunteers kindly shares her experience of living with dissociative disorders:

Warning: this content contains the discussion of sensitive topics, including self-harm.

If you or someone you know may be struggling with symptoms of a dissociative disorder there is more support and information on the NHS website and also on the website for mental health charity Mind.