Literature DB >> 22884940

From bodies to lives, complainers to consumers: measuring menstrual excess.

Katie Ann Hasson1.   

Abstract

Feminist research has shown repeatedly the extent to which medical accounts pathologize menstruation, yet there has been very little examination of how clinicians and medical researchers actually study and assess menstruation. This paper analyzes 30 US medical journal articles to examine how researchers work to distinguish the specific menstrual disorder of menorrhagia, or excessive bleeding, from normal menstruation. I focus specifically on measurement as a key process in diagnosing menstrual pathology, arguing that measurement practices construct women's bodies as appropriate objects of medical attention in ways that also shape women's positions as participants in knowledge production. I begin with the alkaline hematin method's narrow focus on physical proof of bleeding that proves or disproves women's complaints and trace the emergence of new methods that incorporate women's own assessments of bleeding. Changing ways of measuring menstruation point to shifts in understandings of the body as the object of medical treatment and of patients as medical subjects.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22884940     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.07.005

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


  2 in total

1.  A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss.

Authors:  Julia L Magnay; Shaughn O'Brien; Christoph Gerlinger; Christian Seitz
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2018-08-22       Impact factor: 2.809

2.  The prevalence and impacts heavy menstrual bleeding on anemia, fatigue and quality of life in women of reproductive age.

Authors:  Semra Kocaoz; Rabiye Cirpan; Arife Zuhal Degirmencioglu
Journal:  Pak J Med Sci       Date:  2019 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.088

  2 in total

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