Scientific article 2023
Senses of Touch: The Absence and Presence of Touch in Health Care Encounters of Patients with Mental Illness
Authors:
- Iben Emilie Christensen
- Lone Grøn
- Mette Bech Risør
- Susanne Reventlow
Touch is a fundamental sense and the most unexplored of the five senses, despite its significance for everything we do in relation
to ourselves and others. Studies have shown that touch generates trust, care and comfort and is essential for constituting the body.
Based on ethnographic fieldwork, this study explores the absence and presence of touch in interactions between people with mental
illness and professionals, in health care encounters with general practitioners, neurologists and physiotherapists, as well as masseurs.
We found that touch and physical examination of patients with mental illness is absent in health care encounters, leaving the patients
with feelings of being out of place, misunderstood, less socially approved and less worthy of trust. Drawing on Honneth and Guenther,
we conclude that touch and being touched is an essential dimension of recognition—both of the patients’ bodily sensations and
symptoms and of them as human beings, detached from the psychiatric label—as well as contributing to the constitution of self and
personhood. These findings confirm that touch works as an existential hinge that affirms a connection between the patient, the body
and others and gives a sense of time, space and existence.
to ourselves and others. Studies have shown that touch generates trust, care and comfort and is essential for constituting the body.
Based on ethnographic fieldwork, this study explores the absence and presence of touch in interactions between people with mental
illness and professionals, in health care encounters with general practitioners, neurologists and physiotherapists, as well as masseurs.
We found that touch and physical examination of patients with mental illness is absent in health care encounters, leaving the patients
with feelings of being out of place, misunderstood, less socially approved and less worthy of trust. Drawing on Honneth and Guenther,
we conclude that touch and being touched is an essential dimension of recognition—both of the patients’ bodily sensations and
symptoms and of them as human beings, detached from the psychiatric label—as well as contributing to the constitution of self and
personhood. These findings confirm that touch works as an existential hinge that affirms a connection between the patient, the body
and others and gives a sense of time, space and existence.
Authors
About this publication
Published in
Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry