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Medicalization

Medicalization is the process by which human conditions and problems come to be defined and treated as medical conditions, and thus become the subject of medical study, diagnosis, prevention, or treatment. Medicalization can be driven by new evidence or hypotheses about conditions; by changing social attitudes or economic considerations; or by the development of new medications or treatments.

Medicalization is studied from a sociologic perspective in terms of the role and power of professionals, patients, and corporations, and also for its implications for ordinary people whose self-identity and life decisions may depend on the prevailing concepts of health and illness. Once a condition is classified as medical, a medical model of disability tends to be used in place of a social model. Medicalization may also be termed pathologization or (pejoratively) "disease mongering". Since medicalization is the social process through which a condition becomes a medical disease in need of treatment, medicalization may be viewed as a benefit to human society. According to this view, the identification of a condition as a disease will lead to the treatment of certain symptoms and conditions, which will improve overall quality of life.

Development of the concept edit

The concept of medicalization was devised by sociologists to explain how medical knowledge is applied to behaviors which are not self-evidently medical or biological.[1] The term medicalization entered the sociology literature in the 1970s in the works of Irving Zola, Peter Conrad and Thomas Szasz, among others. According to Eric Cassell's book, The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine (2004), the expansion of medical social control is being justified as a means of explaining deviance.[2] These sociologists viewed medicalization as a form of social control in which medical authority expanded into domains of everyday existence, and they rejected medicalization in the name of liberation. This critique was embodied in works such as Conrad's article "The discovery of hyperkinesis: notes on medicalization of deviance", published in 1973 (hyperkinesis was the term then used to describe what we might now call ADHD).[3] Nevertheless, opium was used to pacify children in ancient Egypt before 2000 BC.

These sociologists did not believe medicalization to be a new phenomenon, arguing that medical authorities had always been concerned with social behavior and traditionally functioned as agents of social control (Foucault, 1965; Szasz,1970; Rosen). However, these authors took the view that increasingly sophisticated technology had extended the potential reach of medicalization as a form of social control, especially in terms of "psychotechnology" (Chorover,1973).

In the 1975 book Limits to medicine: Medical nemesis (1975), Ivan Illich put forth one of the earliest uses of the term "medicalization". Illich, a philosopher, argued that the medical profession harms people through iatrogenesis, a process in which illness and social problems increase due to medical intervention. Illich saw iatrogenesis occurring on three levels: the clinical, involving serious side effects worse than the original condition; the social, whereby the general public is made docile and reliant on the medical profession to cope with life in their society; and the structural, whereby the idea of aging and dying as medical illnesses effectively "medicalized" human life and left individuals and societies less able to deal with these "natural" processes.

The concept of medicalization dovetailed with some aspects of the 1970s feminist movement. Critics such as Ehrenreich and English (1978) argued that women's bodies were being medicalized by the predominantly male medical profession. Menstruation and pregnancy had come to be seen as medical problems requiring interventions such as hysterectomies.

Marxists such as Vicente Navarro (1980) linked medicalization to an oppressive capitalist society. They argued that medicine disguised the underlying causes of disease, such as social inequality and poverty, and instead presented health as an individual issue. Others[4] examined the power and prestige of the medical profession, including the use of terminology to mystify and of professional rules to exclude or subordinate others.

Tiago Correia (2017)[5] offers an alternative perspective on medicalization. He argues that medicalization needs to be detached from biomedicine to overcome much of the criticism it has faced, and to protect its value in contemporary sociological debates. Building on Gadamer's hermeneutical view of medicine, he focuses on medicine's common traits, regardless of empirical differences in both time and space. Medicalization and social control are viewed as distinct analytical dimensions that in practice may or may not overlap. Correia contends that the idea of "making things medical" needs to include all forms of medical knowledge in a global society, not simply those forms linked to the established (bio)medical professions. Looking at "knowledge", beyond the confines of professional boundaries, may help us understand the multiplicity of ways in which medicalization can exist in different times and societies, and allow contemporary societies to avoid such pitfalls as "demedicalization" (through a turn towards complementary and alternative medicine) on the one hand, or the over-rapid and unregulated adoption of biomedical medicine in non-western societies on the other. The challenge is to determine what medical knowledge is present, and how it is being used to medicalize behaviors and symptoms.

Areas edit

A 2002 editorial in the British Medical Journal warned of inappropriate medicalization leading to disease mongering, where the boundaries of the definition of illnesses are expanded to include personal problems as medical problems or risks of diseases are emphasized to broaden the market for medications. The authors noted:

Inappropriate medicalisation carries the dangers of unnecessary labelling, poor treatment decisions, iatrogenic illness, and economic waste, as well as the opportunity costs that result when resources are diverted away from treating or preventing more serious disease. At a deeper level it may help to feed unhealthy obsessions with health, obscure or mystify sociological or political explanations for health problems, and focus undue attention on pharmacological, individualised, or privatised solutions.[6]

For many years, marginalized psychiatrists (such as Peter Breggin, Paula Caplan, Thomas Szasz) and outside critics (such as Stuart A. Kirk) have "been accusing psychiatry of engaging in the systematic medicalization of normality". More recently these concerns have come from insiders who have worked for and promoted the American Psychiatric Association (e.g., Robert Spitzer, Allen Frances).[7]

Benjamin Rush, the father of American psychiatry, claimed that Black people had black skin because they were ill with hereditary leprosy. Consequently, he considered vitiligo as a "spontaneous cure".[8]

According to Franco Basaglia and his followers, whose approach pointed out the role of psychiatric institutions in the control and medicalization of deviant behaviors and social problems, psychiatry is used as the provider of scientific support for social control to the existing establishment, and the ensuing standards of deviance and normality brought about repressive views of discrete social groups.[9]: 70  As scholars have long argued, governmental and medical institutions code menaces to authority as mental diseases during political disturbances.[10]: 14 

The HIV/AIDS pandemic allegedly caused from the 1980s a "profound re-medicalization of sexuality".[11][12]

The diagnosis of premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) has caused some controversy when fluoxetine (also known as Prozac) was being repackaged as a PMDD therapy under the trade named Sarafem. The psychologist Peggy Kleinplatz has criticized the diagnosis as the medicalization of normal human behavior.[13] Other medicalized aspects of women's health include infertility,[14] breastfeeding,[15] the childbirth process,[16] and postpartum depression.[17]

Although it has received less attention, it is claimed that masculinity has also faced medicalization, being deemed damaging to health and requiring regulation or enhancement through drugs, technologies or therapy.[18] Specifically, erectile dysfunction was once considered a natural part of the aging process in men, but has since been medicalized as a problem, late-onset hypogonadism.[19]

According to Kittrie, a number of phenomena considered "deviant", such as alcoholism, drug addiction, prostitution, pedophilia, and masturbation ("self-abuse"), were originally considered as moral, then legal, and now medical problems.[20]: 1 [21] Innumerable other conditions such as obesity, smoking cigarettes, draft malingering, bachelorhood, divorce, unwanted pregnancy, kleptomania, and grief, have been declared diseases by medical and psychiatric authorities.[22] Due to these perceptions, peculiar deviants were subjected to moral, then legal, and now medical modes of social control.[20]: 1  Similarly, Conrad and Schneider concluded their review of the medicalization of deviance by identifying three major paradigms that have reigned over deviance designations in different historical periods: deviance as sin; deviance as crime; and deviance as sickness.[20]: 1 [23]: 36 

According to Mike Fitzpatrick, resistance to medicalization was a common theme of the gay liberation, anti-psychiatry, and feminist movements of the 1970s, but now there is actually no resistance to the advance of government intrusion in lifestyle if it is thought to be justified in terms of public health.[24] Moreover, the pressure for medicalization also comes from society itself.[24]

According to Thomas Szasz, "the therapeutic state swallows up everything human on the seemingly rational ground that nothing falls outside the province of health and medicine, just as the theological state had swallowed up everything human on the perfectly rational ground that nothing falls outside the province of God and religion".[25]: 515 

Healthism edit

Public health campaigns have been criticized as a form of "healthism", which is moralistic in nature rather than primarily focused on health. Medical doctors Petr Shkrabanek and James McCormick wrote a series of publications on this topic in the late 1980s and early 1990s criticizing the UK's Health of The Nation campaign. These publications exposed abuse of epidemiology and statistics by public health authorities and organizations to support lifestyle interventions and screening programs.[26]: 85 [27]: 7  Inculcating a fear of ill-health and a strong notion of individual responsibility has been derided as "health fascism" by some scholars as it objectifies the individual without considering emotional or social factors.[28]: 8 [27]: 7 [29]: 81 

Professionals, patients, corporations and society edit

 
Conversation between doctor and patient

Several decades on the definition of medicalization is complicated, if for no other reason than because the term is so widely used. Many contemporary critics position pharmaceutical companies in the space once held by doctors as the supposed catalysts of medicalization. Titles such as "The making of a disease" [30] or "Sex, drugs, and marketing" [31] critique the pharmaceutical industry for shunting everyday problems into the domain of professional biomedicine. At the same time, others reject as implausible any suggestion that society rejects drugs or drug companies and highlight that the same drugs that are allegedly used to treat deviances from societal norms also help many people live their lives. Even scholars who critique the societal implications of brand-name drugs generally remain open to these drugs' curative effects – a far cry from earlier calls for a revolution against the biomedical establishment. The emphasis in many quarters has come to be on "overmedicalization" rather than "medicalization" in itself.

Others, however, argue that in practice the process of medicalization tends to strip subjects of their social context, so they come to be understood in terms of the prevailing biomedical ideology, resulting in a disregard for overarching social causes such as unequal distribution of power and resources.[32] A series of publications by Mens Sana Monographs have focused on medicine as a corporate capitalist enterprise.[33][34][35]

Scholars argue that in the late 20th century transformation within the health sector in the US altered the relationship between people in the healthcare sector.[36]: 497  This has been attributed to the commodification of healthcare and the role of parties other than doctors such as insurance companies, the pharmaceutical industry, and the government, referred to collectively as countervailing powers.[36]: 499  The doctor remains an authority figure who prescribes pharmaceuticals to patients. However, in some countries, such as the US, ubiquitous direct-to-consumer advertising encourages patients to ask for particular drugs by name, thereby creating a conversation between consumer and drug company that threatens to cut the doctor out of the loop. Additionally, there is a widespread concern regarding the extent of the pharmaceutical marketing direct to doctors and other healthcare professionals. Examples of this direct marketing are visits by salespeople, funding of journals, training courses or conferences, incentives for prescribing, and the routine provision of "information" written by the pharmaceutical company. The role of patients in this economy has also changed. Once regarded as passive victims of medicalization, patients can now occupy active positions as advocates, consumers, or even agents of change.

In response to theory based on medicalisation being insufficient to explain social processes, some scholars have developed a concept of biomedicalization which argues that technical and scientific interventions are transforming medicine. One aspect is pharmaceuticalization, the influence of the use of pharmaceutical drugs rather than other interventions. Other components are computerization of parts of healthcare such as public health, the creation of a "biopolitical economy" of private research outside of state, the perception of health as a moral obligation.[37]

Medicalization has brought health issues to the fore, so people think more and more about things in terms of health and act to promote health. When it comes to health issues, medicine is not the only provider of answers, but there have always been alternatives and competitors. At the same time as medicalization, "paramedicalization" has strengthened: also many treatments for which there is no medical basis, at least for now, are popular and commercially successful.[38]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ White, Kevin (2002). An introduction to the sociology of health and illness. SAGE. p. 42. ISBN 0-7619-6400-2.
  2. ^ Cassell, Eric J. (2004). The nature of suffering and the goals of medicine (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195156164. OCLC 173843216.
  3. ^ Conrad P (October 1975). "The discovery of hyperkinesis: notes on the medicalization of deviant behavior". Soc Probl. 23 (1): 12–21. doi:10.2307/799624. JSTOR 799624. PMID 11662312.
  4. ^ Helman, Cecil (2007). Culture, Health and Illness. London: Arnold. ISBN 9780340914502.
  5. ^ Correia, Tiago (2017). "Revisiting Medicalization: A Critique of the Assumptions of What Counts As Medical Knowledge" (PDF). Front. Sociol. 2 (14). doi:10.3389/fsoc.2017.00014.
  6. ^ Moynihan, Ray; Heath, Iona; Henry, David (13 April 2002). "Selling sickness: the pharmaceutical industry and disease mongering". BMJ. 324 (7342): 886–891. doi:10.1136/bmj.324.7342.886. PMC 1122833. PMID 11950740.
  7. ^ Kirk, S. A.; Gomory, T.; Cohen, D. (2013). Mad Science: Psychiatric Coercion, Diagnosis, and Drugs. Transaction Publishers. p. 185.
  8. ^ Thomas Szasz (1970), The Manufacture of Madness, Syracuse University Press, pp. 153–170
  9. ^ Sapouna, Lydia; Herrmann, Peter (2006). Knowledge in Mental Health: Reclaiming the Social. Hauppauge: Nova Publishers. p. 70. ISBN 1-59454-812-9.
  10. ^ Metzl, Jonathan (2010). The Protest Psychosis: How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease. Beacon Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-8070-8592-9.
  11. ^ Aggleton, Peter; Parker, Richard Bordeaux; Barbosa, Regina Maria (2000). Framing the sexual subject: the politics of gender, sexuality, and power. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21838-8. p.3
  12. ^ Carole S. Vance "Anthropology Rediscovers Sexuality: A Theoretical Comment." Social Science and Medicine 33 (8) 875-884 1991
  13. ^ Offman A, Kleinplatz PJ (2004). Does PMDD Belong in the DSM? Challenging the Medicalization of Women's Bodies. The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality, Vol. 13
  14. ^ Bell, Ann V. (2016-05-01). "The margins of medicalization: Diversity and context through the case of infertility". Social Science & Medicine. 156: 39–46. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.03.005. ISSN 0277-9536. PMID 27017089. Retrieved 2022-01-16.
  15. ^ Apple, R. D. (March 1, 1994). "The Medicalization of Infant Feeding in the United States and New Zealand: Two Countries, One Experience". The Journal of Human Lactation. 10 (1): 31–37. doi:10.1177/089033449401000125. PMID 7619244. S2CID 19873049. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  16. ^ Shaw, Jessica C. A. (2013). "The Medicalization of Birth and Midwifery as Resistance". Health Care for Women International. Informa UK Limited. 34 (6): 522–536. doi:10.1080/07399332.2012.736569. ISSN 0739-9332. PMID 23514572. S2CID 30949127.
  17. ^ Godderis, Rebecca (2011-09-01). "Iterative Generation of Diagnostic Categories Through Production and Practice: The Case of Postpartum Depression". Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 35 (4): 484–500. doi:10.1007/s11013-011-9232-0. ISSN 0165-005X. PMID 21882061. S2CID 21432019.
  18. ^ Rosenfeld, Dana; Faircloth, Christopher A. (2006). Medicalized masculinities. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1592130976. OCLC 60603319.
  19. ^ Marshall, Barbara L. (July 1, 2006). "The New Virility: Viagra, Male Aging and Sexual Function". Sexualities. 9 (3): 345–362. doi:10.1177/1363460706065057. S2CID 145132541. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  20. ^ a b c Manning, Nick (1989). The therapeutic community movement: charisma and routinization. London: Routledge. p. 1. ISBN 0-415-02913-9.
  21. ^ Kittrie, Nicholas (1971). The right to be different: deviance and enforced therapy. Johns Hopkins Press. ISBN 0-8018-1319-0.
  22. ^ Thomas Szasz (1977), The Theology of Medicine, Harper & Row, p. 109
  23. ^ Conrad, Peter; Schneider, Joseph (1992). Deviance and medicalization: from badness to sickness. Temple University Press. p. 36. ISBN 0-87722-999-6.
  24. ^ a b Fitzpatrick, Mike (August 2004). "From 'nanny state' to 'therapeutic state'". The British Journal of General Practice. 1 (54(505)): 645. PMC 1324868. PMID 15517694.
  25. ^ Szasz, Thomas (Spring 2001). "The Therapeutic State: The Tyranny of Pharmacracy" (PDF). The Independent Review. V (4): 485–521. ISSN 1086-1653. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  26. ^ Fitzpatrick, Michael (2002-01-04). The Tyranny of Health: Doctors and the Regulation of Lifestyle. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-56346-3.
  27. ^ a b Fiona, Sim; Martin, McKee (2011-09-01). Issues In Public Health. McGraw-Hill Education (UK). ISBN 978-0-335-24422-5.
  28. ^ Fitzpatrick, Katie; Tinning, Richard (2014-02-05). Health Education: Critical perspectives. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-07214-8.
  29. ^ Zembylas, Michalinos (2021-05-06). Affect and the Rise of Right-Wing Populism: Pedagogies for the Renewal of Democratic Education. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-83840-5.
  30. ^ Moynihan, Ray (2003-01-04). "The making of a disease: female sexual dysfunction". BMJ: British Medical Journal. 326 (7379): 45–47. doi:10.1136/bmj.326.7379.45. PMC 1124933. PMID 12511464.
  31. ^ Mason, Diana J. (2003). "Editorial: Sex, Drugs, and Marketing". The American Journal of Nursing. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. 103 (6): 7. ISSN 1538-7488. JSTOR 29745103. Retrieved 2022-03-10.
  32. ^ Filc D (September 2004). "The medical text: between biomedicine and hegemony". Soc Sci Med. 59 (6): 1275–85. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.01.003. PMID 15210098.
  33. ^ Ajai R Singh, Shakuntala A Singh, 2005, "Medicine as a corporate enterprise, patient welfare centered profession, or patient welfare centered professional enterprise?" Mens Sana Monographs, 3(2), p19-51
  34. ^ Ajai R Singh, Shakuntala A Singh, 2005, "The connection between academia and industry", Mens Sana Monographs, 3(1), p5-35
  35. ^ Ajai R Singh, Shakuntala A Singh, 2005, "Public welfare agenda or corporate research agenda?", Mens Sana Monographs, 3(1), p41-80.
  36. ^ a b The Wiley Blackwell companion to medical sociology. William C. Cockerham. Hoboken, NJ. 2021. ISBN 978-1-119-63380-8. OCLC 1198989810.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  37. ^ Clarke, Adele E. (2014-02-21), "Biomedicalization", in Cockerham, William C; Dingwall, Robert; Quah, Stella (eds.), The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Health, Illness, Behavior, and Society, Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. 137–142, doi:10.1002/9781118410868.wbehibs083, ISBN 978-1-118-41086-8, retrieved 2022-09-23
  38. ^ Surhone, Lambert M; Tennoe, Mariam T; Henssonow, Susan F, eds. (2010). Paramedicalization. Tallinn: VLC Publishing. ISBN 978-613-3-08893-1.

Further reading edit

  • Conrad, Peter (2007). The Medicalization of Society: On the Transformation of Human Conditions into Treatable Disorders. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9780801892349.
  • Horwitz, Allan, and Wakefield, Jerome (2007).The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry Has Transformed Normal Sadness into Depressive Disorder. Oxford University Press.
  • Lane, Christopher (2007). Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness. Yale University Press.
  • Illich, Ivan (July 1975). "The medicalization of life". Journal of Medical Ethics. 1 (2): 73–77. doi:10.1136/jme.1.2.73. PMC 1154458. PMID 809583.
  • Jamoulle, Marc (February 2015). "Quaternary prevention, an answer of family doctors to overmedicalization" (PDF). International Journal of Health Policy and Management. 4 (2): 61–64. doi:10.15171/ijhpm.2015.24. PMC 4322627. PMID 25674569.
  • Hatch, Anthony Ryan (2019). Silent Cells: The Secret Drugging of Captive America. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 184 pages. ISBN 978-1517907433. OCLC 1097608624.

medicalization, process, which, human, conditions, problems, come, defined, treated, medical, conditions, thus, become, subject, medical, study, diagnosis, prevention, treatment, driven, evidence, hypotheses, about, conditions, changing, social, attitudes, eco. Medicalization is the process by which human conditions and problems come to be defined and treated as medical conditions and thus become the subject of medical study diagnosis prevention or treatment Medicalization can be driven by new evidence or hypotheses about conditions by changing social attitudes or economic considerations or by the development of new medications or treatments Medicalization is studied from a sociologic perspective in terms of the role and power of professionals patients and corporations and also for its implications for ordinary people whose self identity and life decisions may depend on the prevailing concepts of health and illness Once a condition is classified as medical a medical model of disability tends to be used in place of a social model Medicalization may also be termed pathologization or pejoratively disease mongering Since medicalization is the social process through which a condition becomes a medical disease in need of treatment medicalization may be viewed as a benefit to human society According to this view the identification of a condition as a disease will lead to the treatment of certain symptoms and conditions which will improve overall quality of life Contents 1 Development of the concept 2 Areas 3 Healthism 4 Professionals patients corporations and society 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingDevelopment of the concept editThe concept of medicalization was devised by sociologists to explain how medical knowledge is applied to behaviors which are not self evidently medical or biological 1 The term medicalization entered the sociology literature in the 1970s in the works of Irving Zola Peter Conrad and Thomas Szasz among others According to Eric Cassell s book The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine 2004 the expansion of medical social control is being justified as a means of explaining deviance 2 These sociologists viewed medicalization as a form of social control in which medical authority expanded into domains of everyday existence and they rejected medicalization in the name of liberation This critique was embodied in works such as Conrad s article The discovery of hyperkinesis notes on medicalization of deviance published in 1973 hyperkinesis was the term then used to describe what we might now call ADHD 3 Nevertheless opium was used to pacify children in ancient Egypt before 2000 BC These sociologists did not believe medicalization to be a new phenomenon arguing that medical authorities had always been concerned with social behavior and traditionally functioned as agents of social control Foucault 1965 Szasz 1970 Rosen However these authors took the view that increasingly sophisticated technology had extended the potential reach of medicalization as a form of social control especially in terms of psychotechnology Chorover 1973 In the 1975 book Limits to medicine Medical nemesis 1975 Ivan Illich put forth one of the earliest uses of the term medicalization Illich a philosopher argued that the medical profession harms people through iatrogenesis a process in which illness and social problems increase due to medical intervention Illich saw iatrogenesis occurring on three levels the clinical involving serious side effects worse than the original condition the social whereby the general public is made docile and reliant on the medical profession to cope with life in their society and the structural whereby the idea of aging and dying as medical illnesses effectively medicalized human life and left individuals and societies less able to deal with these natural processes The concept of medicalization dovetailed with some aspects of the 1970s feminist movement Critics such as Ehrenreich and English 1978 argued that women s bodies were being medicalized by the predominantly male medical profession Menstruation and pregnancy had come to be seen as medical problems requiring interventions such as hysterectomies Marxists such as Vicente Navarro 1980 linked medicalization to an oppressive capitalist society They argued that medicine disguised the underlying causes of disease such as social inequality and poverty and instead presented health as an individual issue Others 4 examined the power and prestige of the medical profession including the use of terminology to mystify and of professional rules to exclude or subordinate others Tiago Correia 2017 5 offers an alternative perspective on medicalization He argues that medicalization needs to be detached from biomedicine to overcome much of the criticism it has faced and to protect its value in contemporary sociological debates Building on Gadamer s hermeneutical view of medicine he focuses on medicine s common traits regardless of empirical differences in both time and space Medicalization and social control are viewed as distinct analytical dimensions that in practice may or may not overlap Correia contends that the idea of making things medical needs to include all forms of medical knowledge in a global society not simply those forms linked to the established bio medical professions Looking at knowledge beyond the confines of professional boundaries may help us understand the multiplicity of ways in which medicalization can exist in different times and societies and allow contemporary societies to avoid such pitfalls as demedicalization through a turn towards complementary and alternative medicine on the one hand or the over rapid and unregulated adoption of biomedical medicine in non western societies on the other The challenge is to determine what medical knowledge is present and how it is being used to medicalize behaviors and symptoms Areas editThis section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message July 2021 A 2002 editorial in the British Medical Journal warned of inappropriate medicalization leading to disease mongering where the boundaries of the definition of illnesses are expanded to include personal problems as medical problems or risks of diseases are emphasized to broaden the market for medications The authors noted Inappropriate medicalisation carries the dangers of unnecessary labelling poor treatment decisions iatrogenic illness and economic waste as well as the opportunity costs that result when resources are diverted away from treating or preventing more serious disease At a deeper level it may help to feed unhealthy obsessions with health obscure or mystify sociological or political explanations for health problems and focus undue attention on pharmacological individualised or privatised solutions 6 For many years marginalized psychiatrists such as Peter Breggin Paula Caplan Thomas Szasz and outside critics such as Stuart A Kirk have been accusing psychiatry of engaging in the systematic medicalization of normality More recently these concerns have come from insiders who have worked for and promoted the American Psychiatric Association e g Robert Spitzer Allen Frances 7 Benjamin Rush the father of American psychiatry claimed that Black people had black skin because they were ill with hereditary leprosy Consequently he considered vitiligo as a spontaneous cure 8 According to Franco Basaglia and his followers whose approach pointed out the role of psychiatric institutions in the control and medicalization of deviant behaviors and social problems psychiatry is used as the provider of scientific support for social control to the existing establishment and the ensuing standards of deviance and normality brought about repressive views of discrete social groups 9 70 As scholars have long argued governmental and medical institutions code menaces to authority as mental diseases during political disturbances 10 14 The HIV AIDS pandemic allegedly caused from the 1980s a profound re medicalization of sexuality 11 12 The diagnosis of premenstrual dysphoric disorder PMDD has caused some controversy when fluoxetine also known as Prozac was being repackaged as a PMDD therapy under the trade named Sarafem The psychologist Peggy Kleinplatz has criticized the diagnosis as the medicalization of normal human behavior 13 Other medicalized aspects of women s health include infertility 14 breastfeeding 15 the childbirth process 16 and postpartum depression 17 Although it has received less attention it is claimed that masculinity has also faced medicalization being deemed damaging to health and requiring regulation or enhancement through drugs technologies or therapy 18 Specifically erectile dysfunction was once considered a natural part of the aging process in men but has since been medicalized as a problem late onset hypogonadism 19 According to Kittrie a number of phenomena considered deviant such as alcoholism drug addiction prostitution pedophilia and masturbation self abuse were originally considered as moral then legal and now medical problems 20 1 21 Innumerable other conditions such as obesity smoking cigarettes draft malingering bachelorhood divorce unwanted pregnancy kleptomania and grief have been declared diseases by medical and psychiatric authorities 22 Due to these perceptions peculiar deviants were subjected to moral then legal and now medical modes of social control 20 1 Similarly Conrad and Schneider concluded their review of the medicalization of deviance by identifying three major paradigms that have reigned over deviance designations in different historical periods deviance as sin deviance as crime and deviance as sickness 20 1 23 36 According to Mike Fitzpatrick resistance to medicalization was a common theme of the gay liberation anti psychiatry and feminist movements of the 1970s but now there is actually no resistance to the advance of government intrusion in lifestyle if it is thought to be justified in terms of public health 24 Moreover the pressure for medicalization also comes from society itself 24 According to Thomas Szasz the therapeutic state swallows up everything human on the seemingly rational ground that nothing falls outside the province of health and medicine just as the theological state had swallowed up everything human on the perfectly rational ground that nothing falls outside the province of God and religion 25 515 Healthism editPublic health campaigns have been criticized as a form of healthism which is moralistic in nature rather than primarily focused on health Medical doctors Petr Shkrabanek and James McCormick wrote a series of publications on this topic in the late 1980s and early 1990s criticizing the UK s Health of The Nation campaign These publications exposed abuse of epidemiology and statistics by public health authorities and organizations to support lifestyle interventions and screening programs 26 85 27 7 Inculcating a fear of ill health and a strong notion of individual responsibility has been derided as health fascism by some scholars as it objectifies the individual without considering emotional or social factors 28 8 27 7 29 81 Professionals patients corporations and society edit nbsp Conversation between doctor and patientSeveral decades on the definition of medicalization is complicated if for no other reason than because the term is so widely used Many contemporary critics position pharmaceutical companies in the space once held by doctors as the supposed catalysts of medicalization Titles such as The making of a disease 30 or Sex drugs and marketing 31 critique the pharmaceutical industry for shunting everyday problems into the domain of professional biomedicine At the same time others reject as implausible any suggestion that society rejects drugs or drug companies and highlight that the same drugs that are allegedly used to treat deviances from societal norms also help many people live their lives Even scholars who critique the societal implications of brand name drugs generally remain open to these drugs curative effects a far cry from earlier calls for a revolution against the biomedical establishment The emphasis in many quarters has come to be on overmedicalization rather than medicalization in itself Others however argue that in practice the process of medicalization tends to strip subjects of their social context so they come to be understood in terms of the prevailing biomedical ideology resulting in a disregard for overarching social causes such as unequal distribution of power and resources 32 A series of publications by Mens Sana Monographs have focused on medicine as a corporate capitalist enterprise 33 34 35 Scholars argue that in the late 20th century transformation within the health sector in the US altered the relationship between people in the healthcare sector 36 497 This has been attributed to the commodification of healthcare and the role of parties other than doctors such as insurance companies the pharmaceutical industry and the government referred to collectively as countervailing powers 36 499 The doctor remains an authority figure who prescribes pharmaceuticals to patients However in some countries such as the US ubiquitous direct to consumer advertising encourages patients to ask for particular drugs by name thereby creating a conversation between consumer and drug company that threatens to cut the doctor out of the loop Additionally there is a widespread concern regarding the extent of the pharmaceutical marketing direct to doctors and other healthcare professionals Examples of this direct marketing are visits by salespeople funding of journals training courses or conferences incentives for prescribing and the routine provision of information written by the pharmaceutical company The role of patients in this economy has also changed Once regarded as passive victims of medicalization patients can now occupy active positions as advocates consumers or even agents of change In response to theory based on medicalisation being insufficient to explain social processes some scholars have developed a concept of biomedicalization which argues that technical and scientific interventions are transforming medicine One aspect is pharmaceuticalization the influence of the use of pharmaceutical drugs rather than other interventions Other components are computerization of parts of healthcare such as public health the creation of a biopolitical economy of private research outside of state the perception of health as a moral obligation 37 Medicalization has brought health issues to the fore so people think more and more about things in terms of health and act to promote health When it comes to health issues medicine is not the only provider of answers but there have always been alternatives and competitors At the same time as medicalization paramedicalization has strengthened also many treatments for which there is no medical basis at least for now are popular and commercially successful 38 See also edit nbsp Society portalInterventionism medicine Gothenburg Study of Children with DAMP Medical model Sociology of health and illness Social stigmaReferences edit White Kevin 2002 An introduction to the sociology of health and illness SAGE p 42 ISBN 0 7619 6400 2 Cassell Eric J 2004 The nature of suffering and the goals of medicine 2nd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195156164 OCLC 173843216 Conrad P October 1975 The discovery of hyperkinesis notes on the medicalization of deviant behavior Soc Probl 23 1 12 21 doi 10 2307 799624 JSTOR 799624 PMID 11662312 Helman Cecil 2007 Culture Health and Illness London Arnold ISBN 9780340914502 Correia Tiago 2017 Revisiting Medicalization A Critique of the Assumptions of What Counts As Medical Knowledge PDF Front Sociol 2 14 doi 10 3389 fsoc 2017 00014 Moynihan Ray Heath Iona Henry David 13 April 2002 Selling sickness the pharmaceutical industry and disease mongering BMJ 324 7342 886 891 doi 10 1136 bmj 324 7342 886 PMC 1122833 PMID 11950740 Kirk S A Gomory T Cohen D 2013 Mad Science Psychiatric Coercion Diagnosis and Drugs Transaction Publishers p 185 Thomas Szasz 1970 The Manufacture of Madness Syracuse University Press pp 153 170 Sapouna Lydia Herrmann Peter 2006 Knowledge in Mental Health Reclaiming the Social Hauppauge Nova Publishers p 70 ISBN 1 59454 812 9 Metzl Jonathan 2010 The Protest Psychosis How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease Beacon Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 8070 8592 9 Aggleton Peter Parker Richard Bordeaux Barbosa Regina Maria 2000 Framing the sexual subject the politics of gender sexuality and power Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21838 8 p 3 Carole S Vance Anthropology Rediscovers Sexuality A Theoretical Comment Social Science and Medicine 33 8 875 884 1991 Offman A Kleinplatz PJ 2004 Does PMDD Belong in the DSM Challenging the Medicalization of Women s Bodies The Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality Vol 13 Bell Ann V 2016 05 01 The margins of medicalization Diversity and context through the case of infertility Social Science amp Medicine 156 39 46 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2016 03 005 ISSN 0277 9536 PMID 27017089 Retrieved 2022 01 16 Apple R D March 1 1994 The Medicalization of Infant Feeding in the United States and New Zealand Two Countries One Experience The Journal of Human Lactation 10 1 31 37 doi 10 1177 089033449401000125 PMID 7619244 S2CID 19873049 Retrieved 16 January 2022 Shaw Jessica C A 2013 The Medicalization of Birth and Midwifery as Resistance Health Care for Women International Informa UK Limited 34 6 522 536 doi 10 1080 07399332 2012 736569 ISSN 0739 9332 PMID 23514572 S2CID 30949127 Godderis Rebecca 2011 09 01 Iterative Generation of Diagnostic Categories Through Production and Practice The Case of Postpartum Depression Culture Medicine and Psychiatry Springer Science and Business Media LLC 35 4 484 500 doi 10 1007 s11013 011 9232 0 ISSN 0165 005X PMID 21882061 S2CID 21432019 Rosenfeld Dana Faircloth Christopher A 2006 Medicalized masculinities Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 1592130976 OCLC 60603319 Marshall Barbara L July 1 2006 The New Virility Viagra Male Aging and Sexual Function Sexualities 9 3 345 362 doi 10 1177 1363460706065057 S2CID 145132541 Retrieved 16 January 2022 a b c Manning Nick 1989 The therapeutic community movement charisma and routinization London Routledge p 1 ISBN 0 415 02913 9 Kittrie Nicholas 1971 The right to be different deviance and enforced therapy Johns Hopkins Press ISBN 0 8018 1319 0 Thomas Szasz 1977 The Theology of Medicine Harper amp Row p 109 Conrad Peter Schneider Joseph 1992 Deviance and medicalization from badness to sickness Temple University Press p 36 ISBN 0 87722 999 6 a b Fitzpatrick Mike August 2004 From nanny state to therapeutic state The British Journal of General Practice 1 54 505 645 PMC 1324868 PMID 15517694 Szasz Thomas Spring 2001 The Therapeutic State The Tyranny of Pharmacracy PDF The Independent Review V 4 485 521 ISSN 1086 1653 Retrieved 20 January 2012 Fitzpatrick Michael 2002 01 04 The Tyranny of Health Doctors and the Regulation of Lifestyle Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 56346 3 a b Fiona Sim Martin McKee 2011 09 01 Issues In Public Health McGraw Hill Education UK ISBN 978 0 335 24422 5 Fitzpatrick Katie Tinning Richard 2014 02 05 Health Education Critical perspectives Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 07214 8 Zembylas Michalinos 2021 05 06 Affect and the Rise of Right Wing Populism Pedagogies for the Renewal of Democratic Education Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 83840 5 Moynihan Ray 2003 01 04 The making of a disease female sexual dysfunction BMJ British Medical Journal 326 7379 45 47 doi 10 1136 bmj 326 7379 45 PMC 1124933 PMID 12511464 Mason Diana J 2003 Editorial Sex Drugs and Marketing The American Journal of Nursing Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins 103 6 7 ISSN 1538 7488 JSTOR 29745103 Retrieved 2022 03 10 Filc D September 2004 The medical text between biomedicine and hegemony Soc Sci Med 59 6 1275 85 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2004 01 003 PMID 15210098 Ajai R Singh Shakuntala A Singh 2005 Medicine as a corporate enterprise patient welfare centered profession or patient welfare centered professional enterprise Mens Sana Monographs 3 2 p19 51 Ajai R Singh Shakuntala A Singh 2005 The connection between academia and industry Mens Sana Monographs 3 1 p5 35 Ajai R Singh Shakuntala A Singh 2005 Public welfare agenda or corporate research agenda Mens Sana Monographs 3 1 p41 80 a b The Wiley Blackwell companion to medical sociology William C Cockerham Hoboken NJ 2021 ISBN 978 1 119 63380 8 OCLC 1198989810 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Clarke Adele E 2014 02 21 Biomedicalization in Cockerham William C Dingwall Robert Quah Stella eds The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Health Illness Behavior and Society Chichester UK John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 137 142 doi 10 1002 9781118410868 wbehibs083 ISBN 978 1 118 41086 8 retrieved 2022 09 23 Surhone Lambert M Tennoe Mariam T Henssonow Susan F eds 2010 Paramedicalization Tallinn VLC Publishing ISBN 978 613 3 08893 1 Further reading editConrad Peter 2007 The Medicalization of Society On the Transformation of Human Conditions into Treatable Disorders Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801892349 Horwitz Allan and Wakefield Jerome 2007 The Loss of Sadness How Psychiatry Has Transformed Normal Sadness into Depressive Disorder Oxford University Press Lane Christopher 2007 Shyness How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness Yale University Press Illich Ivan July 1975 The medicalization of life Journal of Medical Ethics 1 2 73 77 doi 10 1136 jme 1 2 73 PMC 1154458 PMID 809583 Jamoulle Marc February 2015 Quaternary prevention an answer of family doctors to overmedicalization PDF International Journal of Health Policy and Management 4 2 61 64 doi 10 15171 ijhpm 2015 24 PMC 4322627 PMID 25674569 Hatch Anthony Ryan 2019 Silent Cells The Secret Drugging of Captive America Minnesota University of Minnesota Press pp 184 pages ISBN 978 1517907433 OCLC 1097608624 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medicalization amp oldid 1159633919, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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