How to distinguish medicalization from over-medicalization?
- PMID: 29951940
- PMCID: PMC6394498
- DOI: 10.1007/s11019-018-9850-1
How to distinguish medicalization from over-medicalization?
Abstract
Is medicalization always harmful? When does medicine overstep its proper boundaries? The aim of this article is to outline the pragmatic criteria for distinguishing between medicalization and over-medicalization. The consequences of considering a phenomenon to be a medical problem may take radically different forms depending on whether the problem in question is correctly or incorrectly perceived as a medical issue. Neither indiscriminate acceptance of medicalization of subsequent areas of human existence, nor criticizing new medicalization cases just because they are medicalization can be justified. The article: (i) identifies various consequences of both well-founded medicalization and over-medicalization; (ii) demonstrates that the issue of defining appropriate limits of medicine cannot be solved by creating an optimum model of health; (iii) proposes four guiding questions to help distinguish medicalization from over-medicalization. The article should foster a normative analysis of the phenomenon of medicalization and contribute to the bioethical reflection on the boundaries of medicine.
Keywords: Boundaries of medicine; Guiding questions; Medicalization; Moral evaluation of medicalization; Over-medicalization; Pragmatic approach.
References
-
- Blaxter, Mildred. 2010. Health, Cambridge. Polity.
-
- Boorse Christopher. On Distinction Between Disease and Illness. Philosophy and Public Affairs. 1975;5(1):49–68.
-
- Broom Dorothy, Woodward Roslyn. Medicalization Reconsidered: Toward a Collaborative Approach to Care. Sociology of Health and Illness. 1996;18:357–378. doi: 10.1111/1467-9566.ep10934730. - DOI
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources