Over recent years there has been renewed focus on medicalisation. Amongst other things, this is the result of the realisation that expansion of the medical domain can also have undesirable effects. However, the line between justified medical interventions and overdiagnosis is difficult to draw. The first step in regaining control of undesirable medicalisation is to identify and quantify the processes behind it and the situations in clinical practice in which it may occur. In this article we discuss different types of medicalisation and, on the basis of this, we give an indication of the frequency with which medicalisation occurs. Finally, we discuss the mechanisms that facilitate medicalisation
Due to the rapid technical development and increasing availability of diagnostic tests, the use of d...
Social scientists and other analysts have written about medicalization since at least the 1970s. Mos...
Abstract Van Dijk et al describe how society's influence on medicine drives both medicalisation...
Over recent years there has been renewed focus on medicalisation. Amongst other things, this is the ...
The concept of overdiagnosis is a dominant topic in medical literature and discussions. In research ...
Besides being extensively studied by health sociologists, medicalisation has also become a term that...
The question has been mongering around that is the use of medicine dangerous? What are the set limit...
The aim is to present some basic characteristics of the processes of medicalisation and medicamental...
The question has been mongering around that is the use of medicine dangerous? What are the set limit...
Van Dijk and colleagues present three cases to illustrate and discuss the relationship between medic...
Abstract This essay analyzes the overmedicalization (unnecessary and unwanted medicalization) genera...
What is medicalisation? What are its causes and eff ects? Who benefi ts from medicalisation, and who...
Item does not contain fulltextThe Dutch system of obstetric care is often recommended for midwife-at...
Discourse relating to the dual processes of medicalisation and demedicalisation has become deeply em...
Over the past decades the number of actors that are engaged in health policy processes has grown (Jo...
Due to the rapid technical development and increasing availability of diagnostic tests, the use of d...
Social scientists and other analysts have written about medicalization since at least the 1970s. Mos...
Abstract Van Dijk et al describe how society's influence on medicine drives both medicalisation...
Over recent years there has been renewed focus on medicalisation. Amongst other things, this is the ...
The concept of overdiagnosis is a dominant topic in medical literature and discussions. In research ...
Besides being extensively studied by health sociologists, medicalisation has also become a term that...
The question has been mongering around that is the use of medicine dangerous? What are the set limit...
The aim is to present some basic characteristics of the processes of medicalisation and medicamental...
The question has been mongering around that is the use of medicine dangerous? What are the set limit...
Van Dijk and colleagues present three cases to illustrate and discuss the relationship between medic...
Abstract This essay analyzes the overmedicalization (unnecessary and unwanted medicalization) genera...
What is medicalisation? What are its causes and eff ects? Who benefi ts from medicalisation, and who...
Item does not contain fulltextThe Dutch system of obstetric care is often recommended for midwife-at...
Discourse relating to the dual processes of medicalisation and demedicalisation has become deeply em...
Over the past decades the number of actors that are engaged in health policy processes has grown (Jo...
Due to the rapid technical development and increasing availability of diagnostic tests, the use of d...
Social scientists and other analysts have written about medicalization since at least the 1970s. Mos...
Abstract Van Dijk et al describe how society's influence on medicine drives both medicalisation...