​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health Services

Youth mental health interventions in the UK increasingly use goal-setting procedures to shape services and measure outcomes in ways that are intended to be meaningful to service users. This research article questions this premise, departing with the ethnographic observation that many young people do...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rosie Jones McVey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2023-04-01
Series:Medicine Anthropology Theory
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/6764
_version_ 1797838326879748096
author Rosie Jones McVey
author_facet Rosie Jones McVey
author_sort Rosie Jones McVey
collection DOAJ
description Youth mental health interventions in the UK increasingly use goal-setting procedures to shape services and measure outcomes in ways that are intended to be meaningful to service users. This research article questions this premise, departing with the ethnographic observation that many young people do not seem to welcome the invitation or requirement to direct their therapeutic aims and set the terms for service evaluation in the form of goals. I will show that goal-setting procedures are examples of a broader field of complex ethico-political dilemmas navigated by mental health service staff. While wanting to enable young people to be healthy agents, staff are simultaneously critically aware of the risk of imposing normative, unrealistic and unfair expectations onto young people. I propose that these staff are engaged in a specific form of ethico-political practice, which I call ‘nested ethics’. I use this term to describe instances where staff ethically evaluate their own conduct in line with the capacity to enable the ethical life of another person (youth, in this case). Viewing goal-setting processes as an example of an uneasy politics of nested ethics enables a new perspective from which to advance debates about the enablement of service user choice within care provisions.
first_indexed 2024-04-09T15:40:07Z
format Article
id doaj.art-aff6dd85ea7c48cb9beb3b93eb4327ed
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2405-691X
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-09T15:40:07Z
publishDate 2023-04-01
publisher University of Edinburgh Library
record_format Article
series Medicine Anthropology Theory
spelling doaj.art-aff6dd85ea7c48cb9beb3b93eb4327ed2023-04-27T12:52:55ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryMedicine Anthropology Theory2405-691X2023-04-0110112710.17157/mat.10.1.67646764​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health ServicesRosie Jones McVey0University of CambridgeYouth mental health interventions in the UK increasingly use goal-setting procedures to shape services and measure outcomes in ways that are intended to be meaningful to service users. This research article questions this premise, departing with the ethnographic observation that many young people do not seem to welcome the invitation or requirement to direct their therapeutic aims and set the terms for service evaluation in the form of goals. I will show that goal-setting procedures are examples of a broader field of complex ethico-political dilemmas navigated by mental health service staff. While wanting to enable young people to be healthy agents, staff are simultaneously critically aware of the risk of imposing normative, unrealistic and unfair expectations onto young people. I propose that these staff are engaged in a specific form of ethico-political practice, which I call ‘nested ethics’. I use this term to describe instances where staff ethically evaluate their own conduct in line with the capacity to enable the ethical life of another person (youth, in this case). Viewing goal-setting processes as an example of an uneasy politics of nested ethics enables a new perspective from which to advance debates about the enablement of service user choice within care provisions.http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/6764mental healthethicsyouthgoalsagencyuk
spellingShingle Rosie Jones McVey
​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health Services
Medicine Anthropology Theory
mental health
ethics
youth
goals
agency
uk
title ​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health Services
title_full ​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health Services
title_fullStr ​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health Services
title_full_unstemmed ​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health Services
title_short ​​Nested Ethics: The Management of Young People’s Goals in Alternative UK Mental Health Services
title_sort ​​nested ethics the management of young people s goals in alternative uk mental health services
topic mental health
ethics
youth
goals
agency
uk
url http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/6764
work_keys_str_mv AT rosiejonesmcvey nestedethicsthemanagementofyoungpeoplesgoalsinalternativeukmentalhealthservices