Literature DB >> 19638599

Intuition, subjectivity, and Le bricoleur: cancer patients' accounts of negotiating a plurality of therapeutic options.

Alex Broom1.   

Abstract

Cancer patients are now combining complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) with biomedical cancer treatments, reflecting an increasingly pluralistic health care environment. However, there has been little research done on the ways in which cancer patients juggle multiplicity in claims to expertise, models of disease, and therapeutic practice. Drawing on the accounts of cancer patients who use CAM, in this article I develop a conceptualization of therapeutic decision making, utilizing the notion of bricolage as a key point of departure. The patient accounts illustrate the "piecing together" (or bricolage) of therapeutic trajectories, drawing on intuitive, embodied knowledge, as well as formalized "objective" scientific expertise. Le bricoleur, as characterized here, actively mediates, rather than accepts or rejects CAM or biomedicine, and utilizes a combination of scientific expertise, embodied physicality, and social knowledge to make decisions and assess therapeutic effectiveness. Although these "border crossings" are potentially subversive of established biomedical expertise, the analysis also illustrates the structural constraints (and penalties) associated with bricolage, and furthermore, the interplay of a repositioning of responsibility with neoliberal forms of self-governance.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19638599     DOI: 10.1177/1049732309341190

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Qual Health Res        ISSN: 1049-7323


  8 in total

1.  From Disappointment to Holistic Ideals: A Qualitative Study on Motives and Experiences of Using Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Sweden.

Authors:  Jenny-Ann Danell
Journal:  J Public Health Res       Date:  2015-08-04

2.  Reconfiguring health knowledges? Contemporary modes of self-care as 'everyday fringe medicine'.

Authors:  Pia Vuolanto; Harley Bergroth; Johanna Nurmi; Suvi Salmenniemi
Journal:  Public Underst Sci       Date:  2020-06-27

3.  Individualised medicine from the perspectives of patients using complementary therapies: a meta-ethnography approach.

Authors:  Brigitte Franzel; Martina Schwiegershausen; Peter Heusser; Bettina Berger
Journal:  BMC Complement Altern Med       Date:  2013-06-03       Impact factor: 3.659

4.  A qualitative study of influences on older women's practitioner choices for back pain care.

Authors:  Emma R Kirby; Alex F Broom; Jon Adams; David W Sibbritt; Kathryn M Refshauge
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2014-03-21       Impact factor: 2.655

Review 5.  Decision-making about complementary and alternative medicine by cancer patients: integrative literature review.

Authors:  Laura Weeks; Lynda G Balneaves; Charlotte Paterson; Marja Verhoef
Journal:  Open Med       Date:  2014-04-15

6.  The Sociology of Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

Authors:  Nicola Gale
Journal:  Sociol Compass       Date:  2014-06-19

7.  The Sydney playground project--levelling the playing field: a cluster trial of a primary school-based intervention aiming to promote manageable risk-taking in children with disability.

Authors:  Anita C Bundy; Shirley Wyver; Kassia S Beetham; Jo Ragen; Geraldine Naughton; Paul Tranter; Richard Norman; Michelle Villeneuve; Grace Spencer; Anne Honey; Judith Simpson; Louise Baur; Julia Sterman
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2015-11-14       Impact factor: 3.295

8.  Legitimating complementary therapies in the NHS: Campaigning, care and epistemic labour.

Authors:  Kathy Dodworth; Ellen Stewart
Journal:  Health (London)       Date:  2020-06-07
  8 in total

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