Medicalized: Shaping Our Perceptions Of Illness Print E-mail
Science - Science Enterprise
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Monday, 25 June 2007 03:05
Experts examine drug ads, patient empowerment, and more
 
Special section of The Lancet (Feb. 24). The essays grew out of an international workshop and zero in on the fact that even the word
Medicalization is the extension of medical care to formerly non-medical areas of life. Health or behavior problems, when defined and treated as medical issues, stimulate corresponding changes in social attitudes and terminology.
 
Diagnoses extend to alcoholism, attention deficit disorder, obesity, various sexual behaviours, and Harry Benjamin Syndrome (HBS — fka transsexuality), among others. Some behaviors have been demedicalized (e.g., homosexuality and masturbation) from their former status as medical problems.
 
Medicalization is usually accompanied by (or driven by) the availability of treatment.
 
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) has exhibited dramatic growth in the number of mental illness categories, from 180 in 1968 to more than 350 by 1994.
 
For example, the current version lists caffeine intoxication, impotence, jet lag, and premature ejaculation as mental illnesses. Also, the DSM provides a patina of medical importance to the most commonly diagnosed personality disorder (309.9 Personality Disorder not Otherwise Specified.)
 
Paramedicalization is the antithetical process, with alternative therapies and theories of health, wellness and disease.
 

 
The term Medicalization came into prominence following a seminal article by Irvin Zola. Medicine as an Institution of Social Control. Sociology Review, 20(4):487:504 (1972). 
Ann Arbor, MI, USA. Do prescription drug ads make people think they're sick when they're not, or create "disease" out of thin air? Does the "empowered patient" movement mean that doctors have lost some of their professional clout when it comes to making diagnoses and prescribing treatment?

These questions and more are the focus of a set of probing essays in a special section of The Lancet (Feb. 24).
 
The essays grew out of an international workshop and zero in on the fact that even the word "medicalization" has a different meaning today than 30 years ago.

Jonathan Metzl, M.D., Ph.D., a University of Michigan Medical School psychiatrist and U-M women's studies researcher."When the term first came into use in the 1970s, it was used critically to mean the 'evil' actions of doctors who turned deviation from the norm into disease, and imposed medical authority on aspects of everyday life such as birth, aging or dying," says Jonathan Metzl. "But today, it's used more in connection with the actions of pharmaceutical companies, and we need to understand its effects better."
 

Jonathan Metzl, M.D., Ph.D. is a University of Michigan Medical School psychiatrist and U-M women's studies researcher. Metzl co-organized the workshop and wrote or co-wrote two of the six Lancet articles.  

 
The six essays focus on the intersections between medicine and society, including the role of the physician and the patient, and of the values, wants and needs that each doctor or patient brings to each interaction.

Metzl co-authored the introduction with Rebecca M. Herzig, Ph.D., a professor in Women and Gender Studies at Bates College in Maine who worked with him to organize the workshop. They report that a Google search for the term "medicalization" (and its British spelling, "medicalisation") yields more than 358,000 hits --most of which have to do with the drug industry's role in changing societal perceptions of disease, "normalcy" and wellness.
 
But the authors also warn against painting this phenomenon with an entirely negative brush. "The same drugs that treat deviances from social norms also help many people live their lives," they write. While the old definition of "medicalization" painted patients as the victims, the new model gives them the opportunity to be advocates and choosy consumers -- if they and their doctors discuss openly their beliefs about what they think the drug from the television advertisement will do for them.

Metzl examines the impact of direct-to-consumer drug advertising even further, in an essay on what Europeans can learn from Americans' ten-year experience with the ads if Britain and European countries decided to allow them too.

"Is it the case that our notions of illness are created by the pharmaceutical industry's advertising, or is it also the case that drug companies are reflecting societal expectations?," Metzl asks. "Culture plays a large role in this process, and the drug companies aren't just inventing this from scratch. They're playing to a market that's used to asking for things from their doctors, and it's raising very interesting questions of interpersonal dynamics."

Book: Prozac on the Couch: Prescribing Gender in the Era of Wonder DrugsMetzl authored of a 2003 book, "Prozac on the Couch: Prescribing Gender in the Era of Wonder Drugs," that examined how depression and anxiety medications were represented in advertising aimed at physicians and the entertainment media in the latter half of the 20th century.
 
He says in the new essay that today's ads amplify people's cultural expectations or even change them. For instance, erectile dysfunction ads that are featured prominently at sporting events and on TV play to men's perceptions of what it is to be a normal, healthy man. The same goes for antidepressant ads showing women who are able to fulfill their roles and duties as mothers.

What people do in response to these ads is another aspect to the medicalization issue, Metzl says. Studies have shown that patients who go to their doctors and ask for a medicine they saw in an advertisement are likely to get it — which, of course, is part of the reason the blitz of ads has escalated every year since the U.S. Food & Drug Administration relaxed the rules for them in 1997.

But this has led to a kind of tension in the interaction between doctors and patients that is new, Metzl notes, as physicians try to decide whether to say yes or no to each request. The fact that physicians themselves are exposed to the same ads, and are part of the same society as their patients, further complicates the issue.

The answer for U.S. doctors, and for the British and European doctors who may soon find themselves in the same position as their American counterparts, may be to bring the social issues directly into their conversations with patients, Metzl explains.
 
"If a problem is being medicalized, we need to look at what else we can do as physicians besides blaming drug companies, and talk to patients about what else they need to be aware of and what may be driving their response to an ad". "Doctors and patients shouldn't mindless follow the suggestions of drug ads, but they should talk about the options and the expectations that they have, and how realistic those expectations may be -- and then decide whether the medicine is right."

In addition to Metzl and Hertzig, the essay section features writings by Nancy Tomes, of the history department at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, writing on patient empowerment and the dilemmas of today's medicalization; Nikolas Rose of the London School of Economics, who looks at the history and future of medicalization; Troy Duster of New York University, who examines the medicalization of race including medicines that are being aimed at members of certain ethnic groups; and Cindy Patton of Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, who looks at the specific issue of medicalization in the treatment of HIV/AIDS.

The workshop that led to the writing and publication of the essays was funded by grants from the University of Michigan, the Charles Engelhard Foundation, and Bates College.
 

 
Historical References
 
Conrad P, Schneider JW. Deviance and medicalization: from bad­ness to sickness. The C.V. Mosby Company, St. Louis 1980a.
 
Conrad P, Schneider JW. Looking at levels of medicaliza­ti­on. Social Science and Medicine 1980b:14A:75-79.
 
Foucault M. The birth of a clinic. Random House, New York 1975.
 
Giddens A. Modernity and self-identity. Self and society in the late modern age. Polity Press, Cornwall 1991.
 
Gordon DR. Clinical science and clinical expertise: changing boundaries between art and science in medicine. In Lock M, Gordon DR (eds.). Biome­di­ci­ne exa­mined. Kluwer Acade­mic Pub­­lishers, Boston 1988, p.257-295.
 
Illich I. Medical nemesis. Pantheon Books, Inc., New York 1976.
 
Illich I, Zola IK, McKnight J, Caplan J, Shaiken H. Disabling professions. Marion Boyars, London 1977.
 
Klaukka T: Lääkettä terveille. Suomen Lääkärilehti 1999:28:3386-3387
Lyng S. Holistic health and biomedical medicine. A countersystem analysis. State University of New York Press, New York 1990.
 
McKeown T. The role of medicine. Dream, mirage or nemesis? Prin­ceton University Press, London 1976.
 
Sontag S. Illness as metaphor. Penguin Books, Harmondsworth 1982.
 
Zola I. Medicine as an institution of social control. Sociological Review 1972:4:487-504.
 

 
 
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Last Updated on Thursday, 15 November 2007 02:23