| Literature DB >> 29429062 |
Abstract
Precision Medicine has become a common label for data-intensive and patient-driven biomedical research. Its intended future is reflected in endeavours such as the Precision Medicine Initiative in the USA. This article addresses the question whether it is possible to discern a new 'medical cosmology' in Precision Medicine, a concept that was developed by Nicholas Jewson to describe comprehensive transformations involving various dimensions of biomedical knowledge and practice, such as vocabularies, the roles of patients and physicians and the conceptualisation of disease. Subsequently, I will elaborate my assessment of the features of Precision Medicine with the help of Michel Foucault, by exploring how precision medicine involves a transformation along three axes: the axis of biomedical knowledge, of biomedical power and of the patient as a self. Patients are encouraged to become the managers of their own health status, while the medical domain is reframed as a data-sharing community, characterised by changing power relationships between providers and patients, producers and consumers. While the emerging Precision Medicine cosmology may surpass existing knowledge frameworks; it obscures previous traditions and reduces research-subjects to mere data. This in turn, means that the individual is both subjected to the neoliberal demand to share personal information, and at the same time has acquired the positive 'right' to become a member of the data-sharing community. The subject has to constantly negotiate the meaning of his or her data, which can either enable self-expression, or function as a commanding Superego.Entities:
Keywords: Big data; Foucault; Medical cosmology; Participatory medicine; Precision medicine; ’All-of-Us’ research program
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29429062 PMCID: PMC6267256 DOI: 10.1007/s11019-018-9828-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Health Care Philos ISSN: 1386-7423
Medical cosmologies
| Occupational role of physician | Perception of the “sick man” (i.e. patient) | Task of biomedical investigator | Conceptualisation of illness | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bedside | Practitioner | Person | Prognosis and therapy | Overall psycho-somatic disturbance |
| Hospital | Clinician | Case | Diagnosis and classification | Organic lesion |
| Laboratory | Scientist | Cell complex | Analysis and explanation | Biochemical process |
| Surveillance | Epidemiologist | Risk assemblage | Conversion of epidemological risk toclinical risk | Latent deviation from norm |
| E-scaped | Information scientist | Expert patient health seeker | Assessment and communication of risk evidence | Communication breakdown |
Medical cosmologies; precision medicine
| Cosmology | Occupational role of physician | Perception of ‘sick man’ (i.e. patient) | Task of biomedical investigator | Conceptualization of Illness |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bedside | Practitioner | Person | Prognosis and therapy | Overall psycho-somatic disturbance |
| Hospital | Clinician | Case | Diagnosis and classification | Organic lesion |
| Laboratory | Scientist | Cell Complex | Analysis and explanation | Biochemical process |
| Surveillance | Epidemiologist | Risk assemblage | Convert epidemiological risk to clinical risk | Latent deviation from norm |
| E-scaped | Information scientist | Expert Patient | Assessment and communication of risks; and assessment of research evidence | Communications breakdown, interaction of systems |
| Precision | Data-consultant | Digital consumer | Biomarker based health promotion | Ill-managed molecular cascades |