Abstract

Modern psychiatry, which considers the patient as a human subject, places the intersubjective relationship at the center of therapeutic work. The concern for singularity and proximity is therefore at the heart of its practices. The caregiver exposes himself in person to the patient, supported in this adventure by the institution, which helps him by its principles and its devices to regulate emotions and affects. However, the concern for objectification that drives management logic should not lead contemporary psychiatry to abandon the human relationship for dashboards.

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