Medical constructions of long-term exhaustion, past and present
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/7892Date
2015-04-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Culture and history affect the ways in which medical knowledge is shaped,
sustained and changed. The less knowledge we have, the larger the space for the
cultural imprint becomes. Based on these assumptions, we ask: how have medical
constructions of long-term exhaustion changed over time, and how are changing
constructions related to societal change? To discuss these questions we conducted
a comparative study of medical texts from two historical periods: 1860–1930 and
1970–2013. Our data are limited to two diagnoses: neurasthenia and
encephalomyelitis. After comparing the two periods by identifying diverging and
converging aspects, we interpreted observed continuities and interruptions in
relation to historical developments. We found that in the medical literature, longterm
exhaustion became transformed from a somatic ailment bred by modern
civilisation to a self-inflicted psychiatric ailment. At the same time, it changed
from being a male-connoted high-status condition to a female-connoted low-status
condition. We interpret these changes as contingent upon culturally available
modes of interpretations. Medical knowledge thereby becomes infused with
cultural norms and values which give them a distinct cultural bias. The historical
controversies surrounding this medically contested condition neatly display the
socially contingent factors that govern the social construction of medical
knowledge.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Lian, O. S. and Bondevik, H. (2015), Medical constructions of long-term exhaustion, past and present. Sociology of Health & Illness, 37: 920–935Metadata
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