Literature DB >> 11144910

Doing things with illness. The micro politics of the CFS clinic.

J Banks1, L Prior.   

Abstract

This paper focuses on lay and professional ideas about the nature of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), and in particular, the ways in which understandings of the disorder are developed in a clinical setting. Our data are drawn from observations of consultations between sufferers and physicians in a UK medical out-patients clinic. We treat the clinic as a political field. That is to say, as an arena in which 'problems' (about the management of illness) are constituted, and alternative approaches and solutions to such problems are pressed. We note that in the realms of symptoms, aetiology and treatment evaluation, lay people in the CFS clinic have quite distinct ideas about what their problems are and how they might be analysed and managed--ideas that are often in conflict with those of medical professionals. Thus, lay sufferers, for example, operate within a different conceptual terrain from that of many professional experts. They are more likely to refer to a disease (myalgic encephalomyelitis or ME), rather than a syndrome. They call upon different kinds of hypotheses to explain their symptoms. They hold to conflicting ideas about the order of causal sequences, and they give emphasis to different kinds of phenomena in their accounts of illness. As a consequence, clinical consultations can often take on the form of a political contest between physician and patient to define the true and real nature of the patient's disorder--a micro political struggle in which neurological symptoms can be re-framed as psychiatric symptoms, and psychiatric symptoms as neurological. In short, a contest in which the demarcation lines between mind and body are continually assessed and re-defined, and the tenets of 'biomedicine' are constantly challenged.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11144910     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(00)00117-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  7 in total

1.  Generating a Social Movement Online Community through an Online Discourse: The Case of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis.

Authors:  Olaug S Lian; Jan Grue
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2017-06

2.  Explanatory models of medically unexplained symptoms: a qualitative analysis of the literature.

Authors:  J van Ravenzwaaij; Tc Olde Hartman; H van Ravesteijn; R Eveleigh; E van Rijswijk; Plbj Lucassen
Journal:  Ment Health Fam Med       Date:  2010-12

3.  The PRIME project: developing a patient evidence-base.

Authors:  Sophie Staniszewska; Sally Crowe; Douglas Badenoch; Carol Edwards; Jan Savage; Will Norman
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2010-06-23       Impact factor: 3.377

4.  Using multiple sources of knowledge to reach clinical understanding of chronic fatigue syndrome.

Authors:  Carolyn A Chew-Graham; Greg Cahill; Christopher Dowrick; Alison Wearden; Sarah Peters
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2008 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 5.166

5.  General practitioners' perceptions of chronic fatigue syndrome and beliefs about its management, compared with irritable bowel syndrome: qualitative study.

Authors:  Rosalind Raine; Simon Carter; Tom Sensky; Nick Black
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2004-05-28

6.  Patients' descriptions of the relation between physical symptoms and negative emotions: a qualitative analysis of primary care consultations.

Authors:  Ella Bekhuis; Janna Gol; Christopher Burton; Judith Rosmalen
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  2020-01-30       Impact factor: 6.302

7.  Overcoming the barriers to the diagnosis and management of chronic fatigue syndrome/ME in primary care: a meta synthesis of qualitative studies.

Authors:  Kerin Bayliss; Mark Goodall; Anna Chisholm; Beth Fordham; Carolyn Chew-Graham; Lisa Riste; Louise Fisher; Karina Lovell; Sarah Peters; Alison Wearden
Journal:  BMC Fam Pract       Date:  2014-03-07       Impact factor: 2.497

  7 in total

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