5.4.3
Social Constructionist Approach
Test your knowledge with free interactive questions on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
The Unreliability of Diagnoses
Broadly, social constructionist approaches to mental health view mental illness as a social, rather than biological, construction.

The myth of mental illness
- Thomas Szasz argues that mental illness is a label applied by powerful or influential people to control those seen as socially disruptive or who challenge the dominant ideology.
- What we define as madness or mental illness cannot be cured because the problem is not within the individual but in the attitudes of other people.
- Mental illness does not, therefore, exist.

Experiment
- David Rosenhan conducted an experiment in the 1970’s to investigate how well health professional could diagnose mental illness.
- He arranged for healthy volunteers (including himself) to visit different psychiatric hospitals in the United States and lie to staff about hearing voices.

Findings
- All were diagnosed with schizophrenia and admitted to hospital where they spent between 7 and 52 days.

Experiment 2
- When the hospitals discovered that they had been tricked, they challenged Rosenhan to repeat the experiment and assured him that they would identify all of his ‘pseudo-patients’.

Findings 2
- When the hospitals declared that they had found forty-one fake patients, Rosenhan admitted that he hadn’t actually sent any.
Criticism of Social Constructionist Approaches
Broadly, social constructionist approaches to mental health view mental illness as a social, rather than biological, construction. This view is not free from criticism.
1Theory & Methods
1.1Sociological Theories
1.2Sociological Methods
2Education with Methods in Context
2.1Role & Function of the Education System
2.2Educational Achievement
2.3Relationships & Processes Within Schools
3Option 1: Culture & Identity
3.1Conceptions of Culture
3.2Identity & Socialisation
3.3Social Identity
3.4Production, Consumption & Globalisation
4Option 1: Families & Households
4.1Families & Households
4.2Changing Patterns
4.3The Symmetrical Family
4.4Children & Childhood
5Option 1: Health
5.1Social Constructions
5.2Social Distribution of Healthcare
5.3Provision & Access to Healthcare
5.4Mental Health
6Option 1: Work, Poverty & Welfare
6.1Poverty & Wealth
7Option 2: Beliefs in Society
7.1Ideology, Science & Religion
7.2Religious Movements
7.3Society & Religion
8Option 2: Global Development
8.1Development, Underdevelopment & Global Inequality
8.2Globalisation & Global Organisations
8.3Aid, Trade, Industrialisation, Urbanisation
9Option 2: The Media
9.1Contemporary Media
9.2Media Representations
10Crime & Deviance
10.1Crime & Society
10.2Social Distribution of Crime
Jump to other topics
1Theory & Methods
1.1Sociological Theories
1.2Sociological Methods
2Education with Methods in Context
2.1Role & Function of the Education System
2.2Educational Achievement
2.3Relationships & Processes Within Schools
3Option 1: Culture & Identity
3.1Conceptions of Culture
3.2Identity & Socialisation
3.3Social Identity
3.4Production, Consumption & Globalisation
4Option 1: Families & Households
4.1Families & Households
4.2Changing Patterns
4.3The Symmetrical Family
4.4Children & Childhood
5Option 1: Health
5.1Social Constructions
5.2Social Distribution of Healthcare
5.3Provision & Access to Healthcare
5.4Mental Health
6Option 1: Work, Poverty & Welfare
6.1Poverty & Wealth
7Option 2: Beliefs in Society
7.1Ideology, Science & Religion
7.2Religious Movements
7.3Society & Religion
8Option 2: Global Development
8.1Development, Underdevelopment & Global Inequality
8.2Globalisation & Global Organisations
8.3Aid, Trade, Industrialisation, Urbanisation
9Option 2: The Media
9.1Contemporary Media
9.2Media Representations
10Crime & Deviance
10.1Crime & Society
10.2Social Distribution of Crime
Practice questions on Social Constructionist Approach
Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4Rosenhan's investigation of the diagnosis of mental illness:Fill in the list
- 5
Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium
Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions
Mini-mock exams based on your study history
Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books



Social Constructionist Approaches to Mental Illness
Broadly, social constructionist approaches to mental health view mental illness as a social, rather than biological, construction.
Social approach
Arguments for the social approach
Cultural support
Political contention