| Literature DB >> 25967850 |
Anna Luise Kirkengen1,2, Tor-Johan Ekeland3, Linn Getz1, Irene Hetlevik1, Edvin Schei2,4, Elling Ulvestad5,6, Arne Johan Vetlesen7.
Abstract
Escalating costs, increasing multi-morbidity, medically unexplained health problems, complex risk, poly-pharmacy and antibiotic resistance can be regarded as artefacts of the traditional knowledge production in Western medicine, arising from its particular worldview. Our paper presents a historically grounded critical analysis of this view. The materialistic shift of Enlightenment philosophy, separating subjectivity from bodily matter, became normative for modern medicine and yielded astonishing results. The traditional dichotomies of mind/body and subjective/objective are, however, incompatible with modern biological theory. Medical knowledge ignores central tenets of human existence, notably the physiological impact of subjective experience, relationships, history and sociocultural contexts. Biomedicine will not succeed in resolving today's poorly understood health problems by doing 'more of the same'. We must acknowledge that health, sickness and bodily functioning are interwoven with human meaning-production, fundamentally personal and biographical. This implies that the biomedical framework, although having engendered 'success stories' like the era of antibiotics, needs to be radically revised.Entities:
Keywords: dichotomies; general practice; lived body; medical anomalies; phenomenology
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25967850 DOI: 10.1111/jep.12369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eval Clin Pract ISSN: 1356-1294 Impact factor: 2.431