Diagnostic Controversy: Cultural Perspectives on Competing Knowledge in Healthcare: Routledge Studies in Anthropology
Editat de Carolyn Smith-Morrisen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 dec 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780815346555
ISBN-10: 0815346557
Pagini: 270
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Studies in Anthropology
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0815346557
Pagini: 270
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Studies in Anthropology
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and UndergraduateCuprins
Introduction 1. Diagnosis as the Threshold to 21st-Century Health Carolyn Smith-Morris Part I: Diagnostic Access 2. Testing Pregnant Women for HIV: Contestations in the Global Effort to Reduce the Spread of AIDS Anita Hardon 3. Resisting Tuberculosis or TB Resistance: Enacting Diagnosis in Georgian Labs and Prisons Erin Koch Part II: Medicalization and Resistance to Diagnosis 4. Promotion of Andropause in Brazil: A Case of Male Medicalization Fabiola Rohden 5. Making Sense of Unmeasurable Suffering: The Recontextualization of Debut Stories to a Diagnosis of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Lisbeth Sachs 6. Credibility and the Inexplicable: Parkinson's Disease and Assumed Diagnosis in Contemporary Australia Narelle Warren and Lenore Manderson 7. Defiance, Epistemologies of Ignorance, and Giving Uptake Properly Nancy Nyquist Potter Part III: Diagnosis in a Global Community 8. Supervirus: The Framing of a Doomsday Diagnosis Johanna Crane 9. Diagnosing Psychosis: Scientific Uncertainty, Locally and Globally Neely Myers 10. The Lyme Wars: The Effects of Biocommunicability, Gender, and Epistemic Politics on Health Activation and Lyme Science Georgia Davis and Mark Nichter Afterword Afterword: Diagnosis: To Tell Apart Atwood D. Gaines
Recenzii
"Diagnostic Controversy provides a diverse and intriguing window into the 'diagnostic moment,' when clinicians provide and patients learn what disease they have. In the vein of Latour and Woolgar’s Laboratory Life, the authors provide an anthropology of knowledge about how diagnoses are constructed and how what is often presented as a medico-technical enterprise is suffused with cultural, social, political and economic influences. The broad set of case studies in this book, edited by Carolyn Smith-Morris, provide rich examples from a range of disease categories, not only psychiatric diagnoses that have been a major critical focus of medical anthropologists. The book interrogates a central question in medical anthropology about the boundaries between the normal and the abnormal, introduced to the field by Ruth Benedict in 1934. The book provides new directions in 'critical studies of biomedical praxis' that both informs the field in new ways about the process of diagnosis and provides a framework for on-going interrogation of medical diagnosis as a highly social and cultural practice, even as medical science further emphasizes the biological and genetic bases of disease."
- Peter J. Guarnaccia, Professor, Department of Human Ecology, Cook College and Investigator, Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research, Rutgers University
"This groundbreaking book challenges the assumption central to global health efforts that prioritizes standardization of diagnoses, to impose uniformity and promote regulation across geographical and social boundaries. The authors explore the production and negotiation of diagnoses, and argue powerfully that diagnoses are not objective entities but rather are constituted and renegotiated by processes that are not value-neutral. Rich case studies demonstrate strategies of knowing, the emergence of new diagnoses in particular social contexts, and the personal, professional, epidemiological and financial interests that generate diagnostic controversies and contested power relations. This volume is compelling in its argument that diagnosis is less authoritative than uncertain, subject to resistance as well as accommodation. This is the most innovative work on diagnosis as a construct and its implications for healing praxis since the early 1980s and one that is destined to become a classic in medical anthropology."
-Carolyn Sargent, Professor, Sociocultural Anthropology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Washington University in St. Louis
- Peter J. Guarnaccia, Professor, Department of Human Ecology, Cook College and Investigator, Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research, Rutgers University
"This groundbreaking book challenges the assumption central to global health efforts that prioritizes standardization of diagnoses, to impose uniformity and promote regulation across geographical and social boundaries. The authors explore the production and negotiation of diagnoses, and argue powerfully that diagnoses are not objective entities but rather are constituted and renegotiated by processes that are not value-neutral. Rich case studies demonstrate strategies of knowing, the emergence of new diagnoses in particular social contexts, and the personal, professional, epidemiological and financial interests that generate diagnostic controversies and contested power relations. This volume is compelling in its argument that diagnosis is less authoritative than uncertain, subject to resistance as well as accommodation. This is the most innovative work on diagnosis as a construct and its implications for healing praxis since the early 1980s and one that is destined to become a classic in medical anthropology."
-Carolyn Sargent, Professor, Sociocultural Anthropology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Washington University in St. Louis
Descriere
This is the first collection of ethnographic studies that critiques diagnosis across multiple categories of disease and illness. Smith-Morris’s Introduction repositions diagnosis within critical studies of global health. The authors question specific diagnoses (e.g., HIV, tuberculosis, and andropause) as well as the structural and epistemological factors behind a disease’s naming and experience.