To the editorIn a recent editorial, Kious, Lewis, and Kim (2023) review literature on epistemic injustice in psychiatry, concluding that practice adaptions in response to allegations of EI should be discouraged and may even be detrimental. They present excerpts from a handful of publications that, according to their authors, exemplify EI in psychiatrists' contacts with patients. They examine each example and clarify why they find the allegations of EI to be unfounded.I will not scrutinize their analyses of their sample of cases, but rather recommend a comprehensive review of the literature before reaching a general conclusion that most claims of EI in psychiatry are unsubstantiated. Not least, I want to highlight findings from studies colleagues and I have performed on shared decision-making (SDM) in the psychiatric context. For us, the theory of EI has provided a valuable tool for exploring interactions between service users and providers, illuminating hindering and facilitating conditions for translating policy on user participation into practice.SDM is widely recognized as an essential element of a person-centered, recovery-oriented psychiatric care (Matthias, Salyers, Rollins, & Frankel, 2012;Morant, Kaminskiy, & Ramon, 2016). Creating conditions whereby the knowledge perspectives of service users are legitimized in care planning is considered crucial. However, service users frequently report on negative experiences from encounters with providers, describing how not being regarded as credible due to their psychiatric conditions constitute a key barrier to joint deliberation, an issue that is commonly identified as an urgent matter for further inquiry and understanding (Crichton, Carel, & Kidd, 2017;Kurs & Grinshpoon, 2018).The analytical reasoning in some of the studies Kious et al. ( 2023) have included in their review has inspired our analyses and resonates with our discoveries. In my view, these studies convincingly illustrate how psychiatric patients are particularly vulnerable to EI in their healthcare contacts and provide valuable guidance for addressing and overcoming EI in the psychiatric context. In harmony with the findings of Sanati and Kyratsous (2015), our interview studies involving psychiatric service users and providers (including psychiatrists, psychiatric nurses, and psychologists) highlight how capacities of insight and decision-making competency might certainly be impaired during periods of acute illness but that these, often temporary, lowered capacities may lead to global attributions of irrationality.In our studies, service users referred to various kinds of information they wanted to bring to the table in decision-making processes. Many had lived with illness for long periods but noted that while personal knowledge on e.g. self-help strategies and early signs was often relevant when choosing among different options, it was rarely requested or considered (Grim,