On the biopsychosocial model: the example of political economic causes of diabetes in the Marshall Islands
- PMID: 11665910
On the biopsychosocial model: the example of political economic causes of diabetes in the Marshall Islands
Abstract
Biomedical reductionism, the unwritten theory underlying the practice of medicine, is being supplanted by the biopsychosocial model. The explanatory power of the biopsychosocial model, however, is hampered by an inadequate mechanism to account for the social production of disease. We examine diabetes in the Marshall Islands to explore a conceptual approach that incorporates ecology, history, and political economy into the biopsychosocial model. The use of the Marshall Islands by the United States as testing grounds for nuclear war has led to ecological destruction, population displacement, and economic dependency. The consequence at the biological level has been an epidemic of weight gain, altered metabolism, and diabetes. A political economic perspective reveals that such outcomes are the result of decisions made by those who do not live with these decisions. Such a perspective points the way for social engagement and political work toward justice and health.
Comment in
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Marshall Islands--suffering from the diseases of westernization?Fam Med. 2002 Apr;34(4):235-6; author reply 236. Fam Med. 2002. PMID: 12017132 No abstract available.
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