Creating chronicity
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/13196Date
2017-09-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Kirkengen, Anna LuiseAbstract
An authentic sickness history is the vantage point for juxtaposing a biomedical and a biographical‐
phenomenological reading. What, in a biomedical framework, appears to be a longstanding state
of comorbidity of different and unrelated types of diseases is rendered transparent in a biographical
reading.
This particular reading, evidencing the shortcomings of a biomedical framework regarding identifying the social sources of an increasingly complex burden of disease, is reflected upon in light of recent research in the neurosciences. Thus, the biomedical contribution to a sickness history is demonstrated, with its resultant multimorbidity, chronification, and complete incapacitation of a woman despite the continuing and nearly excessive involvement of the health care system.
This particular reading, evidencing the shortcomings of a biomedical framework regarding identifying the social sources of an increasingly complex burden of disease, is reflected upon in light of recent research in the neurosciences. Thus, the biomedical contribution to a sickness history is demonstrated, with its resultant multimorbidity, chronification, and complete incapacitation of a woman despite the continuing and nearly excessive involvement of the health care system.
Description
Source at: http://doi.org/10.1111/jep.12715