Épisodes

  • Basaglian psychiatry through the prism of philosophy: A conversation with Dr. Mario Colucci
    Sep 4 2025

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    Meet Mario Colucci, a psychiatrist who has worked in a variety of roles in the Trieste system for over 30 years. He is currently the director of the Psychiatric Diagnosis and Treatment Service , which is linked to the general emergency room of the civil hospital in Udine, in the same region of Trieste.

    I consider him “the psychiatrist’s philosopher” because of his keen intellect and how he effortlessly weaves philosophy into telling the story of Basaglia.

    In this interview, we explore four themes:

    • Philosophy – and how it impacted the thinking of Franco Basaglia in the 1960’s
    • Education of psychiatrists – then and now
    • Power dynamics between clinician and patient – and power-sharing
    • The “total institution”

    To provide some additional resource material to follow along in the conversation, the following links may be helpful.

    General discussion of phenomenology.

    Four influential books that coincidentally were published in 1961, the same year that Franco Basaglia was assigned to the asylum in Gorizia:

    • Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason. Michel Foucault (1961)
    • Asylums. Erving Goffman. (1961)
    • The Wretched of the Earth. Frantz Fanon. (1961)
    • The Land of Remorse. Ernesto de Martino (1961)

    Additionally, Dr. Colucci provided additional resources from his own research. In 2001, he and Pierangelo Di Vittorio wrote the first monograph on Basaglia. In 2024, they wrote a book and the links to the abstract and the book are provided below.

    Franco Basaglia. Thought, Practices, Politics [abstract from a book written by Mario Colucci and Pierangelo Di Vittorio] 2001 by Edizioni Bruno Mondadori, Italy. 2005 by Éditions Érès, France; 2006 by Ediciones Nueva Visión, Argentina; 2020 by Edizioni Alpha Beta, Italy; 2024 by Meltemi Editore, Italy.

    Franco Basaglia. Pensiero, pratiche, politica. Mario Colucci and Pierangelo Di Vittorio. 2024

    Here is a link to an article, “The Issue of Violence in Psychiatry,” written by Colucci in April, 2025.

    Foucault and Psychiatric Power after Madness and Civilization[Published in Alain Beaulieu and David Gabbard (eds.), Michel Foucault and Power Today:
    International Multidisciplinary Studies in the History of the Present
    . Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2006.]

    Medicalisation. Mario Colucci. SISSA – International School for Advanced Studies Journal of Science Communication ISSN 1824 – 2049 http://jcom.sissa.it/ JCOM 5 (1), March 2006

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    48 min
  • The human right to work in Italy: A conversation with Stefania Grimaldi of the social cooperative La Collina
    Jul 29 2025

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    Stefania Grimaldi works with the social cooperative La Collina in Trieste Italy. This particular social cooperative was formed in 1988 and employees 200 people, 35 percent of which are considered “disadvantaged.”

    In this episode, we briefly explore the origins of the social cooperative network in Trieste – starting with the first one called the Basaglia SC, which was features recently in a movie called 50 Years of CLU.

    We explore the two different types of social cooperatives – Type A and Type B. In particular, we are interested in the Type B social cooperative because e they train and employ people who fall int the disadvantaged sector – which can involve physical and mental disability, substance use addiction and past experience with incarceration.

    What is interesting is how the social cooperative must operate like a business and coimpete in the market place to secure contracts to provide labor and services. La Collina will be competing with other private entities – and therefore their workforce must be up to the job. We explore their pathway to work which involves mentoring and internship before full employment status is achieved. The cost of the internship is underwritten by the health agency, ASUGI.

    The take-aways for an American audience are threefold:

    · Work is a human right, guaranteed by the UN Declaration of Human Rights and the Convention on Rights for Persons with Disabilities.

    · So-called disadvantaged workers can achieve full employment and pursue their life aspirations

    · The proper supports must be in place to ensure people are trained and prepared to pursue their employment goals


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    1 h et 3 min
  • Peer support to help "jump start" young people into independent life: A conversation with Michele Sipala of Recovery House
    Jun 13 2025

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    Michele Sipala is a peer support worker at Recovery House, located in the heart of the city centre in Trieste. Recovery House provides a six-month transitional residential environment for six young people, age 18 – 35, to help give a “kick start” into more independent living. Recovery House was started in 2015 and over the past nine years, it has served 55 young people.

    In this conversation, we discuss the unique needs of younger people in the mental health services in Trieste who are transitioning into the adult service sector – with changes to their clinical supports and all the stresses and challenges that can accompany an expectation of moving into adult life. He reiterates the three pillars of their mental health system: the importance of work, home and socialization.

    Resources and publications mentioned in this conversation:

    The Recovery House in Trieste: Rational, participants, intervention as the “work.” APA Psyc Net 2018

    The Recovery House of Trieste. Journal of Recovery in Mental Health. 2018

    Full article here.

    Book that has had a great impact on Michele:

    Tutto chiede salvezza (Italian)

    Everything Calls for Salvation (English version)

    And it is a Netflix series – with two seasons.

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    49 min
  • A teacher's life well-lived: A conversation with Caterina Vicentini in Trieste
    May 10 2025

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    In this episode we sit down and talk with Caterina Vicentini in my hotel room in Trieste. Caterina is a math and physics teacher at the secondary school level in a town – Monfalcone -- that is about 30 minutes from the city centre of Trieste.

    She is a service user and takes advantage of opportunities like this to share her story to help destigmatize mental illness and to offer hope that one can have a full life -- education, career and family –- even while encountering the challenges of a mental illness. Of course, she lives and works in a region that is known for exemplary care.

    Her first crisis in her 20’s happened when she was a graduate student. At that time, she had been awarded an Erasmus Fellowship which allowed her to study in Belgium. Then she was offered an opportunity as a PhD student to be a teaching assistant.

    She recalls for us her first experience of being taken to the hospital, forcibly injected by someone she did not trust, and then placed in a padded room with four point restraints. The shock of all that is beyond frightening and you will hear about her Houdini-like liberation that took all night long.

    In 1991 she and her husband returned to Trieste and she shares the stories over the subsequent decades of a few more incidents that would set her back, and how she emerged stronger each time.

    Note: when she talks about going to the “centro di salute mentale” or staying there in one of their beds, this is not a hospital. This is the community mental health center, which is an unlocked place with crisis beds for those who might need to stay for a day, a week or longer.

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    50 min
  • Building trust takes time: A conversation with Claudia Battiston, Psychiatric Rehabilitation Technician in Trieste
    Apr 11 2025

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    In this episode, we speak with Claudia Battison, a Psychiatric Rehabilitation Technician (PRT) in the mental health system in Trieste Italy. I am joined in this interview by Dr. Joy Agner, Assistant Professor at the USC Chan School of Occupational Therapy and Occupational Science at USC.

    Heart Forward has become particularly interested in the potential role that occupational therapists -- if empowered to practice their profession to its full potential -- could play in mental health support settings in the U.S. Unfortunately, the way that OT services are primarily funded (through short-term, medically oriented reimbursement systems) constrain their ability to come alongside people in their recovery journey over the long term.

    This topic was already approached in a Season Four podcast with Dr. Deborah Pitts from USC’s Chan School.

    In this conversation, we learn about the ways in which the PRT engages with the system users. Three stark differences emerge:

    • Time. There are no deadlines. They are afforded the time necessary to get to know the user and tease out the life plans/goals (also referred to as a personal rehabilitation project) that are meaningful to the user.
    • Friendship. The relationship is described more like a friendship than what might be more typical in an American context. This equates with the ethos of coming alongside people in horizontal relationships that eschew the power dynamics associated with “professional” more verticalized relationships.
    • Team. The PRT is part of a broader team – an équipe of other “operators” (their word for staff) – in the Community Mental Health Center. The other team members can help to weigh in on how to support the system user; the PRT is not left to his or her own devices.

    And, or course, all of this is grounded in the belief that a mental health system must support a person in all three pillars of one’s life: casa, lavoro e socializazzione, or housing, work/purpose and community. The PRT must pay attention to each of these pillars to provide support for recovery.

    As we have researched this further, it appears that this role if fairly unique to Italy and was created to augment the psycho-social support that is an underpinning to the Italian model. As described in one of the articles linked below, “Psychiatric rehabilitation technicians are trained to perform multidisciplinary rehabilitation and education interventions for people and their carers.”

    Here are two articles about the role of the Psychiatric Research Technician.

    Psychiatric Rehabilitation in Italy: Cinderella No More – The Contributions of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Technicians. Internation Journal of Mental Health. 2016

    Who cares for it? How to provide psychosocial interventions in the community. International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 2012



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    54 min
  • How I learned to love my madness: A conversation with author Elena Cerkvenic
    Mar 22 2025

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    Elena Cerkvenic recently published a book, Sono Schizofrenica e amo la mia follia, which translated means: I am schizophrenic and I love my madness. This book ia part of a new series being published – La Collana 180: Archivo Critico della Salute Mentale by Meltemi, a publisher in Milan.

    Elena meets with us to share her story as a young woman, living in Trieste, excited by her career studying and teaching languages and literature with a bright future ahead of her. While on a study visit in Munich, at the age of 29, she experienced a psychiatric disruption that was sudden, scary and unexplainable.

    Her life now is bright and full and she describes herself as happy and empowered. She credits the mental health services in Trieste for supporting her recovery and coming alongside her as a “family,” especially during about 20 years of suffering when she was quite isolated and somewhat abandoned by her family and friends.

    Elena was motivated to write this book as a source of hope for others who should not give up on their recovery and their future. She provides a very first-person glimpse into the mental health services in Trieste and feels grateful for the kindness of the people she met along the way and their belief in her potential.

    Bio from the official website for the book:

    Elena Cerkvenič was born in Trieste into a Slovene minority family. A graduate in Languages, she has taught German in middle and high schools. She is currently involved in initiatives for the dissemination of Slovenian language and culture and is involved in associations of people who live or have lived the same experience as her. Her publications include the poetry collections Amore chissà se (2009) and Sapor di.vini (2012).

    Links:

    "Sono schizofrenica e amo la mia follia": presentato il libro di Elena Cerkvenič - RTV SLO

    She speaks about the influence of philosopher Pier Aldo Rovatti.

    If you want to reach out to Elena, please send an email to kerryhmorrison@gmail.com.

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    54 min
  • An integrated ecosystem connecting community mental health centers with the central hospital psychiatric unit: What collaboration looks like with Drs. Alessandra Oretti and Tommaso Bonavigo
    Feb 26 2025

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    In this episode, we learn about the inner workings of two critical elements of the community-based ecosystem in Trieste: the community mental health center (CMHC) and the psychiatric unit in the city’s general hospital (known as the Psychiatric Diagnostic and Treatment Services or SPDC).

    Tommaso Bonavigo, is a psychiatrist at the CMHC Maddalena. He received his education at the Università degli studi di Trieste, graduating first as a doctor (2010) and then as a psychiatrist (2016).

    Alessandra Oretti is the interim director of the mental health department for the city of Trieste and also serves as the head of the central hospital’s psychiatric unit. She has worked in the Trieste mental health system dating back to 1994 and received her degree from the Università degli studi di Trieste in 1998.

    The Azienda Sanitaria Universitaria Giuliano Isontina (ASUGI) is the Health Authority which services the Friuli Venezia Giulia region.

    Oretti and Bonavigo are part of the team of ASUGI experts in the following cooperation projects:

    1. RING project (INTEGRATED STRENGTHENING OF THE PALESTINIAN HEALTH SYSTEM) led by the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation (AICS) in the West Bank area (mainly in the psychiatric hospital of Bethlehem)
    2. DUSM project (Diritti umani e salute mentale dei detenuti ) in Albania, which means Human rights and mental health of the prisoners in Albania, led by a consortium of Italian and Albanian NGOs
    3. Collaboration with East London Foundation Trust for developing a pilot CMHC which will remain open 24 hours

    In this interview, you will pick up on these themes:

    • The importance of the therapeutic relationship which is based upon trust built up over time.
    • How services are integrated in Trieste and the ways in which all the various people impacting a service user – the social worker, nurse, psychiatrist, police (if warranted) and others – create a team around a person.
    • How accountability is assured through the designation of catchment areas – which denotes a territory for which the staff in a CMHC feel responsible for the people they serve.

    Resources:

    How a small Italian city became a model for mental health care. Financial Times, Sarah Neville, December 2024.

    Guidance from World Health Organization: "Comprehensive mental health service networks. Promoting person-centered and rights-based approaches.” See chapter at page 18.

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    1 h et 19 min
  • Life as a Basaglian Revolutionary: A history lesson with Dr. Giovanna Del Guidice
    Feb 1 2025

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    Dr. Giovanna Del Guidice has spent her entire career in pursuit of promoting a more humane and relationship-based treatment ethos for people living with mental health conditions. In this interview we hear the story about how she boldly travelled to Colorno Italy as a young psychiatrist in her 20’s to meet Franco Basaglia in person. The fact that she had read his books and wanted to follow his lead, because she was uncomfortable with the teachings of conventional psychiatry, clearly impressed him because you will hear the story about how she was offered a job and became part of the original equipe! On her part, it was a bold move but clearly changed the trajectory of her life.

    Giovanna, since 2010, has been involved in the Conferenza Basaglia (CONFERENZA PERMANENTE PER LA SALUTE MENTALE NEL MONDO FRANCO BASAGLIA ). This is an organization that she co-founded with Dr. Franco Rotelli, the psychiatrist who followed Franco Basaglia to lead the mental health department in Trieste in the late 1970’s. She currently serves as president.

    From the website, her biography is presented:

    “Psychiatrist, one of Franco Basaglia’s collaborators, has worked since 1971 in the deconstruction process of the Trieste psychiatric hospital and for the construction of community mental health services. She was director of the mental health department of the Caserta Health Authority (2002-2006) and of Cagliari (2006-2009). Mental health consultant of the Calabria health councilor.

    She is a champion for the abolition of mechanical restraint in mental health services, which is seen as a remnant of the old asylum culture and is detrimental to the dignity and rights of those who suffer it, but also negatively impacts the operators who are required to implement it. She is the author of a book … e tu slegalo subito (“and you untie it immediately”) which was published in 2020. [Note: this Vimeo trailer for the book underscores why this is such an inhumane practice.]

    In this episode, we are aided by the translation skills of Erika Rossi, a documentary filmmaker who recently directed a film that features Giovanna Del Guidice among many others. The film, 50 years of CLU, captures the story of the formation of the first social cooperative in Trieste.

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    1 h et 2 min