Literature DB >> 24788959

Promise and deceit: pharmakos, drug replacement therapy, and the perils of experience.

Todd Meyers1.   

Abstract

The problem of lying as a feature of medication compliance has been well documented in anthropological and clinical literatures. Yet the role of the lie-its destabilizing effects on the continuity of drug treatment and therapy, as a technology of drug misuse, or as a way to understand the neuro-chemical processes of treatment (pharmacotherapy "tricking" or lying to the brain)-has been less considered, particularly in the context of opioid replacement therapy. The following paper is set against the backdrop of a three-year study of adolescents receiving a relatively new drug (buprenorphine) for the treatment of opiate dependency inside and outside of highly monitored treatment environments in the United States. Lies give order not only to the experience of addiction but also to the experience of therapy as well. In order to better understand this ordering of experience, the paper puts the widely discussed conceptual duality of the pharmakon (healing and poison) in conversation with a perilously overlooked subject in the critical study of pharmacotherapy, namely the pharmakos or the personification of sacrifice. The paper demonstrates how the patient-subject comes to represent therapeutic promise by allowing for the possibility of (and often performing) deceit.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24788959     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-014-9376-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  10 in total

1.  The history of the development of buprenorphine as an addiction therapeutic.

Authors:  Nancy D Campbell; Anne M Lovell
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  2012-01-18       Impact factor: 5.691

2.  Lying, misery and illness: Towards a medical anthropology of the lie.

Authors:  Els van Dongen; Sylvie Fainzang
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2002-08

Review 3.  Putting social marketing into practice.

Authors:  Gerard Hastings; Laura McDermott
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2006-05-20

4.  Machines, medication, modulation: circuits of dependency and self-care in Las Vegas.

Authors:  Natasha Dow Schüll
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2006-06

5.  Lies in the doctor-patient relationship.

Authors:  John J Palmieri; Theodore A Stern
Journal:  Prim Care Companion J Clin Psychiatry       Date:  2009

6.  Gadè deceptions and lies told by the ill: The Caribbean sociocultural construction of truth in patient-healer encounters.

Authors:  Raymond Massé
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2002-08

7.  Theatres of the lie: 'crazy' deception and lying as drama.

Authors:  Els van Dongen
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2002-08

8.  Lying, secrecy and power within the doctor-patient relationship.

Authors:  Sylvie Fainzang
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2002-08

9.  The meaning of medications: another look at compliance.

Authors:  P Conrad
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1985       Impact factor: 4.634

10.  Precipitating pharmakologies and capital entrapments: narcolepsy and the strange cases of Provigil and Xyrem.

Authors:  Matthew Wolf-Meyer
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2009 Jan-Mar
  10 in total
  1 in total

1.  Polluting pharmaceutical atmospheres: Compulsion, resistance, and symbolism of buprenorphine in Norway.

Authors:  Aleksandra Bartoszko
Journal:  Nordisk Alkohol Nark       Date:  2018-12-19
  1 in total

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