“…The suggested solution here is to develop phenomenological tools jointly with “patients” as well as tailor them to specific “mental illnesses” (Drozdzowicz, 2021 ). Such “biomedicalized participatory practices” (de Boer, 2021 ), and their repeated failure to uphold the distinctiveness of marginalized perspectives within the established hierarchies of knowledge, have already been documented and analyzed in the context of psychiatric and mental health research and praxis (Davidow, 2013 ; Staddon, 2013 ; Brown and Stastny, 2016 ; Carr, 2016 , 2018 , 2019 ; Fabris, 2016 ; Penney and Prescott, 2016 ). This body of critical work, mainly created by authors with first-hand experience of psychiatrization, offers important insights into how efforts to integrate first-person knowledge, in order to transform dominant structures of both mental health service provision and knowledge production, often end up sustaining those structures and ultimately reproducing inequalities.…”