Why Mental Health Is About Decisions: A Practical Framework for Physicians
For decades, mental health has been measured in symptoms. We count panic attacks, chart the depth of low moods, and catalogue sleep disturbances as if a patient were a machine to be audited rather than a navigator trying to find their way through a storm. But if we shift our clinical perspective — from passive bearer of diagnoses to active participant in life — a different and more honest measure of wellbeing emerges: the quality of the decisions a patient is able to make every day . From Symptoms to Functional Capacity In the theory of functional systems , a decision is never a simple act of will. It is the final result of a complex neurobiological and social network striving toward a useful outcome. From this vantage point, the quality of a patient's choices is not a verdict on their strength of character. It is a mirror of the environment in which that choosing happens. When we document that a patient is depressed, we describe a static state. When we ask why their decisio...