Van Dijk et al describe how society’s influence on medicine drives both medicalisation and overdiagnosis, and allege that a major political and ethical concern regarding our increasingly interpreting the world through a biomedical lens is that it serves to individualise and depoliticize social problems. I argue that for medicalisation to serve this purpose, it would have to exclude the possibility of also considering problems in other (social or political) terms; but to think that medical descriptions of the world seek to or are able to do this is to misunderstand the purpose and function of model construction in science in general, and medicine in particular. So, if medicalisation is nonetheless used for the depoliticization describe...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
Van Dijk et al describe how society’s influence on medicine drives both medicalisation and overdiagn...
Abstract Van Dijk et al describe how society's influence on medicine drives both medicalisation...
In an interesting article Wieteke van Dijk and colleagues argue that societal developments and value...
Contains fulltext : 165705.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The concept of ...
The concept of overdiagnosis is a dominant topic in medical literature and discussions. In research ...
The concept of overdiagnosis is a dominant topic in medical literature and discussions. In research ...
Van Dijk and colleagues present three cases to illustrate and discuss the relationship between medic...
Medicalisation has been an important concept in sociological discussions of medicine since the term?...
Van Dijk and colleagues present three cases to illustrate and discuss the relationship between medic...
peer-reviewedMedicalization has featured as a central theme within the medical sociology literature...
In an interesting article Wieteke van Dijk and colleagues argue that societal developments and value...
A number of problems and uncertainties have been raised by this brief review. Although they are well...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
Van Dijk et al describe how society’s influence on medicine drives both medicalisation and overdiagn...
Abstract Van Dijk et al describe how society's influence on medicine drives both medicalisation...
In an interesting article Wieteke van Dijk and colleagues argue that societal developments and value...
Contains fulltext : 165705.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The concept of ...
The concept of overdiagnosis is a dominant topic in medical literature and discussions. In research ...
The concept of overdiagnosis is a dominant topic in medical literature and discussions. In research ...
Van Dijk and colleagues present three cases to illustrate and discuss the relationship between medic...
Medicalisation has been an important concept in sociological discussions of medicine since the term?...
Van Dijk and colleagues present three cases to illustrate and discuss the relationship between medic...
peer-reviewedMedicalization has featured as a central theme within the medical sociology literature...
In an interesting article Wieteke van Dijk and colleagues argue that societal developments and value...
A number of problems and uncertainties have been raised by this brief review. Although they are well...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...
International audienceIn this medical anthropology paper, I offer to the discussion a counter-intuit...