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Shining a spotlight on physician well-being, more

Current Psychiatry. 2019 March;18(3):6,8

Neuropolitics: Psychiatrists’ responsibility

Regarding Dr. Nasrallah’s editorial “Neuropolitics in the age of extremism: Brain regions involved in hatred” (Current Psychiatry, October 2018, p. 6-7), while it’s interesting to learn about the neurophysiological correlates of human experience in the context of current politics, I am concerned that focusing on neural circuits has the potential to distract us from a disturbing new societal dynamic, which is as dangerous as it is atypical. I’m also concerned about the implication that there is currently an equivalent “bidirectionality” of hostility in heated political debate, as if it were simply a matter of 2 equivalent partisan groups that suddenly became more warlike in their opposition to each other.

I agree with Dr. Nasrallah that “even the most skillful psychiatrists” cannot “repair a nation caught up in poisonous emotional turmoil”—at least not by employing clinical skills alone. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try, and the American Psychiatric Association (APA) ethics code (Sections 1.2, 3, and 7) compels us to speak out when our patients or the public are being harmed by public policy.1 We are much more likely to have an impact when we speak with one voice, as is the case with professional medical organizations such as the APA. In December 2018, APA President Dr. Altha J. Stewart issued a call to action addressing “the current climate of hateful and divisive rhetoric that leads to senseless violence and tragic loss of life,” stating “… we members must speak out, use our specialized training and expertise for the public’s benefit, and apply it to not only healing, but also preventing psychological trauma and senseless tragedies.”2

James L. Fleming, MD
Psychiatric Medical Care
Lee’s Summit, Missouri

References
1. American Psychiatric Association. The principles of medical ethics with annotations especially applicable to psychiatry, 2013 edition. https://www.psychiatry.org/psychiatrists/practice/ethics. Published 2013. Accessed February 5, 2019.
2. Stewart A, Pozios, V. Forget about staying in our lane: let’s connect the dots. American Psychiatric Association Publishing. https://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.pn.2018.12a20. Published December 3, 2018. Accessed February 3, 2019.