Yep, I can't put the complex pieces together right nowwhy neoliberalism?
I mean it demonises welfare/dependence, focuses on personal responsibility, the individual/freedom, shys away from analysing systemic problems and sees them more as individuals failings, has a deeply entrenched healthist view that health is in large part a reflection of someone’s effort/good habits. Surely that is an ideology that pairs very well with the idea of psychosomatics, that if you try hard enough you will recover.
Psychosomatics is undergoing a second “boom” these days I think it’s fair to say, and I’m pretty sure the fact neoliberalism is the dominant system in the west right now isn’t a coincidence.
but the rebranding of psychosomatics that happened in the 90s (it was laughed at almost by most at one point, and certainly seemed obscure that this niche of others deeply believed 'lots of people think themselves ill' - you'd always have the polite excpetionalism of 'maybe they just mean the one in a million extraordinaroy cases', and there were big issues around that time around eliciting of false memories in psycho therapy of certain types)
which very much looked to capitalise on the accounting/sales spiel selling points of the new CBT (over its necessary make-up) of 'it can be a defined number of sessions' (predictable cost) and 'only looks forward' (so to those not subject to it 'doesn't waste time on navel-gazing', to those who will be given it 'not like those therapies where you'll be asked about your mum as a child' which was a cliche at that point - oh how it came full circle/was lying given those who pushed this new type turned out to be those employing dodgy tropes and dodgy personality ideas like Moss-MOrris and Chalder). But was a trick because it was trying to just re-sell and re-package the opposite by dressing the psychoanalytic/psychsomatic ideology under something that was short like real CBT but it wasn't really about understanding any actual condition like real CBT was (which eg designed CBT specifically for OCD by understanding that, or a different model for a phobia) - realising that instead of selling loads of analytic sessions to a few people, better to sausage machine to as many as you can I guess.
and avoided looking at cause ie matching the correct therapy to what the cause was - and thereby was replacing social or situational responsibility and changes with perhaps more expensive 'learn how to cope with it' and then lied that it was short-term 'how to cope whilst that changed then dropped the latter bit
well when you look at those behind eg pushing IAPT , the new 're-education' type psychsomatics/non-CBT etc and the likes I remember looking at the biographies and seeing quite a few of them had written about having spent serious time in RUssia specifically as the Soviet Union was dismantling to form eg RUssia and other countries. ie changing from communism to - at that point in time - capitalism, and then under Yeltsin. Which of course was pretty much the 90s that covered and would have led up to the years before the big IAPT 're-education' initiative type stuff.
I therefore think there are more politics and people-management ideological ideas underneath the content of what people wanted pushed than we might think. I suspect very much that some perhaps saw/see it simply as a new avenue of education ... and indeed we now see the acknowledgement of that as they start naming it as 'psycho-education'.. for those who, in the age where 'nudge/coercion' became another 'thing' sort of believed certain things about human beings less fortunate than themselves just needing to be taught they way they think etc.
I suspect those who at the time really genuinely cared about real mental health and what was termed under that back then (I think they changed the name of the department around 2000 onwards) were conned and had no idea what was going to be removed as real structured care and expertise or how surface-level this stuff was designed to transform proper psychology to. And many still won't open their eyes to notice because they don't want to distinguish between bad 'care' and good under some fallacy requiring it not to be harmful and to be well though-through is somehow criticising the whole idea of any care but in particular the switch and bait that somehow it is saying those subject to such care and who have mental health needs are less when it is really saying they deserve safety and oversight just like with anything else.
The worst thing about it was how the bps model deliberately disrupted that psychology had been using models as standard before that, which could at least because they were top-down like decision tress until that 'bps model' then have A/B testing, focused on matching diagnosis of cause/type to more precise treatment and thereby updating these models, and focused on using qualified psychologists/jobs senior enough to be able to diagnose/spot mis-match in diagnosis vs treatment. For many the assessment started with the situational ie fixing the practical issues to then see if once those had been ameliorated there was still an issue to be dealt with.
BPS model and circular generic CBT delivered by sausage machine stopped all that by drawing a diagram with a circle so none of it could ever be tested in that way. No bits isolated out. And it just became the expectation of coping mechanisms and learning to put a positive spin. ie more concerned about the impacts on the outside world rather than the person suffering and making that actually any better. 'dealing with' the people rather than 'dealing with' what was causing the problem, and would perhaps to anyone put in the same situation (so I think there is some belief there it is a lack of stoicism from the 'I don't want to hear about your problems; move on' gang who always happen to have a very different current situation to build from compared to those they assume things of - and tbh also sells well to those who tend to think a stick and pointing in the right direction is the way forward and somehow see a foundation of stone vs sand as some carrot that will enourage people not to change).