| Literature DB >> 26821201 |
Henrik Vogt1, Bjørn Hofmann2,3, Linn Getz4.
Abstract
The emerging concept of systems medicine (or 'P4 medicine'-predictive, preventive, personalized and participatory) is at the vanguard of the post-genomic movement towards 'precision medicine'. It is the medical application of systems biology, the biological study of wholes. Of particular interest, P4 systems medicine is currently promised as a revolutionary new biomedical approach that is holistic rather than reductionist. This article analyzes its concept of holism, both with regard to methods and conceptualization of health and disease. Rather than representing a medical holism associated with basic humanistic ideas, we find a technoscientific holism resulting from altered technological and theoretical circumstances in biology. We argue that this holism, which is aimed at disease prevention and health optimization, points towards an expanded form of medicalization, which we call 'holistic medicalization': Each person's whole life process is defined in biomedical, technoscientific terms as quantifiable and controllable and underlain a regime of medical control that is holistic in that it is all-encompassing. It is directed at all levels of functioning, from the molecular to the social, continual throughout life and aimed at managing the whole continuum from cure of disease to optimization of health. We argue that this medicalization is a very concrete materialization of a broader trend in medicine and society, which we call 'the medicalization of health and life itself'. We explicate this holistic medicalization, discuss potential harms and conclude by calling for preventive measures aimed at avoiding eventual harmful effects of overmedicalization in systems medicine (quaternary prevention).Entities:
Keywords: Biomedicalization; Holism; Medicalization; P4 medicine; Personalized medicine; Precision medicine; Primary care; Quaternary prevention; Systems biology; Systems medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26821201 PMCID: PMC4880637 DOI: 10.1007/s11019-016-9683-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Health Care Philos ISSN: 1386-7423
P4 systems medicine (predictive, preventive, personalized, participatory)
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Fig. 1The human being as a dynamic network of networks. In systems medicine the human organism is envisioned as a system of systems or network of networks. At every scale of biological organization (molecular, cellular, organ, individual and social/environmental) systems are portrayed as giving rise to and embedding each other. At all levels the network of networks is seen as a dynamic or four-dimensional process (as opposed to a static thing) (Copyright: The Institute for Systems Biology, used with permission)
Fig. 2Disease and health as network states. One common way to represent systems or networks in PMSM is as graphs, where interacting units (e.g. molecules) are nodes and their interactions edges. According to one publication, this figure presents ‘A schematic view of a normal (left) and a disease-perturbed network (right). Both node points (colored balls) and edges (lines attaching the balls) change in disease as indicated by changing colors indicative of changing levels and the disappearance of an edge. The nodes and edges change dynamically with disease progression’ (Hood 2013). (Copyright: The Institute for Systems Biology, used with permission). (Color figure online)