Literature DB >> 19549725

Who can resist Foucault?

Alan Bleakley1, John Bligh.   

Abstract

Michel Foucault's analysis of "the birth of the clinic" describes the genesis of a unified discourse that, in retrospect, has shaped western medicine for two centuries. However, in looking prospectively toward a 21st century medicine, Foucault's analysis is necessary but not sufficient. To better critically address medicine and medical education in the era of simulation, we could draw on frameworks developed by futurists such as Jean Baudrillard. Foucault's analysis does not account for contemporary, complex developments of the clinical gaze as the gaze is distributed across practitioners in increasing use of sophisticated, representational diagnostic imaging. Further, Foucault's antihumanist rhetoric sometimes strays into the antihumane, and this is disturbing for those who support the development of patient-centered medicine. Yet we are increasingly teaching aspects of medicine, such as communication, in simulated learning environments in which complex reality is absent, perhaps inadvertently creating an "inhumanity" in medical education.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19549725     DOI: 10.1093/jmp/jhp028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Philos        ISSN: 0360-5310


  3 in total

1.  Foucault's Concept of Clinical Gaze Today.

Authors:  Aleksandar J Ristić; Adriana Zaharijević; Nenad Miličić
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2021-06

2.  Adherence as a language game.

Authors:  Espen Skarstein Kolberg
Journal:  Int J Clin Pharm       Date:  2017-03-02

3.  Medical interpreters as tools: dangers and challenges in the utilitarian approach to interpreters' roles and functions.

Authors:  Elaine Hsieh; Eric Mark Kramer
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2012-07-31
  3 in total

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