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This collection is dedicated to the diagnostic moment and its
unrivaled influence on encompassment and exclusion in health care.
Diagnosis is seen as both an expression and a vehicle of biomedical
hegemony, yet it is also a necessary and speculative tool for the
identification of and response to suffering in any healing system.
Social scientific studies of medicalization and the production of
medical knowledge have revealed tremendous controversy within, and
factitiousness at the outer parameters of, diagnosable conditions.
Yet the ethnographically rich and theoretically complex history of
such studies has not yet congealed into a coherent structural
critique of the process and broader implications of diagnosis. This
volume meets that challenge, directing attention to three
distinctive realms of diagnostic conflict: in the role of diagnosis
to grant access to care, in processes of medicalization and
resistance, and in the transforming and transformative position of
diagnosis for 21st-century global health. Smith-Morris's framework
repositions diagnosis as central to critical global health inquiry.
The collected authors question specific diagnoses (e.g., Lyme
disease, Parkinson's, andropause, psychosis) as well as the
structural and epistemological factors behind a disease's naming
and experience.
This collection is dedicated to the diagnostic moment and its
unrivaled influence on encompassment and exclusion in health care.
Diagnosis is seen as both an expression and a vehicle of biomedical
hegemony, yet it is also a necessary and speculative tool for the
identification of and response to suffering in any healing system.
Social scientific studies of medicalization and the production of
medical knowledge have revealed tremendous controversy within, and
factitiousness at the outer parameters of, diagnosable conditions.
Yet the ethnographically rich and theoretically complex history of
such studies has not yet congealed into a coherent structural
critique of the process and broader implications of diagnosis. This
volume meets that challenge, directing attention to three
distinctive realms of diagnostic conflict: in the role of diagnosis
to grant access to care, in processes of medicalization and
resistance, and in the transforming and transformative position of
diagnosis for 21st-century global health. Smith-Morris's framework
repositions diagnosis as central to critical global health inquiry.
The collected authors question specific diagnoses (e.g., Lyme
disease, Parkinson's, andropause, psychosis) as well as the
structural and epistemological factors behind a disease's naming
and experience.
For the past forty years, the Pima Indians living in the Gila River
Indian Community have been among the most consistently studied
diabetic populations in the world. But despite many medical
advances, the epidemic is continuing and prevalence rates are
increasing. Diabetes among the Pima is the first in-depth
ethnographic volume to delve into the entire spectrum of causes,
perspectives, and conditions that underlie the occurrence of
diabetes in this community. Drawing on the narratives of pregnant
Pima women and nearly ten years work in this community, this book
reveals the Pimas? perceptions and understanding of type 2 and
gestational diabetes, and their experience as they live in the
midst of a health crisis. Arguing that the prenatal period could
offer the best hope for curbing this epidemic, Smith-Morris
investigates many core values informing the Pimas experience of
diabetes: motherhood, foodways, ethnic identity, exercise, attitude
toward health care, and a willingness to seek care. Smith-Morris
contrasts gripping first-person narratives with analyses of several
political, economic, and biomedical factors that influence diabetes
among the Pimas. She also integrates major theoretical explanations
for the disease and illuminates the strengths and weaknesses of
intervention strategies and treatment. An important contribution to
the ongoing struggle to understand and prevent diabetes, this
volume will be of special interest to experts in the fields of
epidemiology, genetics, public health, and anthropology.
"http://www.uapress.arizona.edu/extras/smith-morris/studyguide.php"
target=new>Click here for a Facilitator's Guide to Diabetes
among the Pima
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