Medicalization

Jump to navigation Jump to search

WikiDoc Resources for Medicalization

Articles

Most recent articles on Medicalization

Most cited articles on Medicalization

Review articles on Medicalization

Articles on Medicalization in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Medicalization

Images of Medicalization

Photos of Medicalization

Podcasts & MP3s on Medicalization

Videos on Medicalization

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Medicalization

Bandolier on Medicalization

TRIP on Medicalization

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Medicalization at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Medicalization

Clinical Trials on Medicalization at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Medicalization

NICE Guidance on Medicalization

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Medicalization

CDC on Medicalization

Books

Books on Medicalization

News

Medicalization in the news

Be alerted to news on Medicalization

News trends on Medicalization

Commentary

Blogs on Medicalization

Definitions

Definitions of Medicalization

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Medicalization

Discussion groups on Medicalization

Patient Handouts on Medicalization

Directions to Hospitals Treating Medicalization

Risk calculators and risk factors for Medicalization

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Medicalization

Causes & Risk Factors for Medicalization

Diagnostic studies for Medicalization

Treatment of Medicalization

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Medicalization

International

Medicalization en Espanol

Medicalization en Francais

Business

Medicalization in the Marketplace

Patents on Medicalization

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Medicalization

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]


Medicalization (or medicalisation) is the process by which health or behavior conditions come to be defined and treated as medical issues. The term refers to the process by which certain events or characteristics of everyday life become medical issues, and thus come within the purview of doctors and other health professionals to engage with, study, and treat. The process of medicalization typically involves changes in social attitudes and terminology, and usually accompanies (or is driven by) the availability of treatments. The medicalization of these life experiences has brought with it benefits, but at a price. And those costs, which are not just financial, are not always clear.

Etymology and perception

The term medicalization entered academic and medical publications in the 1970s. The expansion of medical authority into the domains of everyday existence was promoted by doctors and was therefore a force to be rejected in the name of specific kinds of liberation.

About 30 years on, the definition of medicalization is more complicated, if for no other reason than because the term is so widely used: a Google search for "medicalization" in 2008 yields 178,000 hits. Many contemporary critics position pharmaceutical companies in the space once held by doctors as the supposed catalysts of social transformation. Titles such as the The making of a disease or Sex, drugs, and marketing critique the pharmaceutical industry for shunting everyday problems into the domain of professional biomedicine. At the same time, to suggest that society simply reject drugs or drug companies in much the same ways some have suggested it "liberate" itself from the medical system is implausible. The same drugs that 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 physician's role in this present-day notion of medicalization is similarly complex. On one hand, the doctor remains an authority figure who prescribes pharmaceuticals to patients. Whereas on the other, in the USA at least, ubiquitous consumer-directed advertisements instruct 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. 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.

Growth and evolution

The dramatic growth in the number of categories of mental illness as explained the various versions of the DSM (diagnostic and statistical manual of mental illness) is a primary example. For instance, the current (DSM-IV) version, lists impotence, premature ejaculation, jet lag, and caffeine intoxication as mental illnesses. Further, a "patina of medical importance" is given to the most commonly diagnosed personality disorder (309.9 Personality Disorder not Otherwise Specified.)

In the process of medicalization, the purview of medicine extends to formerly non-medical areas of life, by identifying formerly non-medical conditions such as social deviance and aging as medical problems. This concept was named by Irving K. Zola. The sociologist Peter Conrad, among others, has written widely about the process of medicalization.

The concept can be defined in several ways. Usually social scientists talk about medicalization considering the status of medicine: doctors control people. In a narrower sense medicalization means that human decisions (both on a personal and a common level) increasingly rest on health consciousness.

The antithesis of medicalization is the process of paramedicalization, where alternative therapies and theories of health, wellness and disease are adopted. Even if medicalization and paramedicalization are contradictory, they also feed each other: they both ensure that the questions of health and illness stay in sharp focus.

As an historical example, the HIV/AIDS pandemic caused since the 1980s a "profound re-medicalization of sexuality".[1][2]

Many issues have been medicalized and assigned disease terms in the 18th century (e.g. alcoholism, obesity, attention deficit disorder) while some behaviors previously considered medical problems have been de-medicalized (e.g., homosexuality, masturbation).

Discussion

In June 2005, an interdisciplinary group of scholars gathered in New York City, USA to discuss the clinical, philosophical, and political implications of medicalization. The group's central question was whether, in the industrialized world, medicalization remains a viable notion in an age dominated by complex and often contradictory interactions between medicine, pharmaceutical companies, and culture at large. Participants represented a variety of disciplines, including psychiatry, sociology, anthropology, history, critical race theory, and gender studies. As such, topics ranged from the economics of medicalization to the creation and perpetuation of medicalized forms of identity and citizenship.

References

  1. 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
  2. Carole S. Vance "Anthropology Rediscovers Sexuality: A Theoretical Comment." Social Science and Medicine 33 (8) 875-884 1991

Further reading

  • Ivan Illich, Limits to medicine: Medical nemesis, the expropriation of health (1975) — The book influentially made one of the earliest uses of the term "medicalization." Illich, a philosopher, argued that the medical establishment posed a "threat to health" through the production of clinical, social, and cultural "iatrogenesis". For Illich, Western medicine's notion of issues of healing, aging, and dying as medical illnesses effectively "medicalized" human life, rendering individuals and societies less able to deal with these "natural" processes. Illich's assessment of professional medicine, and particularly his use of the term medicalization, quickly caught on, as critiques of the expansive categories of illness and health appeared throughout a vast array of professional literatures throughout the 1970s and 1980s. While this book remains a classic discussion of medicalization, some of the concepts presented and specifics discussed have become dated due to changes in society and medicine.
  • Peter Conrad and Joseph Schneider, Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to Sickness (1992)
  • Sami Timimi, Pathological Child Psychiatry and the Medicalization of Childhood, Brunner-Routledge, 2002, ISBN 158391216997765.
  • Peter Conrad, The Medicalization of Society: On the Transformation of Human Conditions into Medical Disorders (John Hopkins University Press, 2007)
  • Allan Horwitz and Jerome Wakefield, The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry has Transformed Normal Sadness into Depressive Disorder (Oxford University Press, 2007)
  • Christopher Lane, Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness (Yale University Press, 2007)

See also

External links

de:Medikalisierung fi:Medikalisaatio


Template:WikiDoc Sources