Abstract
I discuss Young’s “asymmetrical reciprocity” and apply it to an ethics of mental health
care. Due to its emphasis on engaging with others through respectful dialogue in an inclusive
manner, asymmetrical reciprocity serves as an appropriate framework for guiding caregivers to
interact with their patients and to understand them in a morally responsible and appropriate
manner. In Section 1, I define empathy and explain its benefits in the context of mental health care.
In Section 2, I discuss two potential problems surrounding empathy: the difficulty of perspectivetaking
and “compassion fatigue.” In Section 3, I argue that these issues can be resolved if examined
through the lens of an ethics of care. Reciprocal relationships between patients and caregivers are
an important element in the development of an ethics of care. In Section 4, I introduce two models
of reciprocity that can be applied to a health care context: Benhabib’s symmetrical reciprocity and
Young’s asymmetrical reciprocity. In Section 5, I demonstrate how asymmetrical reciprocity
cultivates empathy and, in Section 6 and Section 7, I show how it overcomes the objections of
empathy and improves therapeutic relationships.