| Literature DB >> 29951940 |
Abstract
Is medicalization always harmful? When does medicine overstep its proper boundaries? The aim of this article is to outline the pragmatic criteria for distinguishing between medicalization and over-medicalization. The consequences of considering a phenomenon to be a medical problem may take radically different forms depending on whether the problem in question is correctly or incorrectly perceived as a medical issue. Neither indiscriminate acceptance of medicalization of subsequent areas of human existence, nor criticizing new medicalization cases just because they are medicalization can be justified. The article: (i) identifies various consequences of both well-founded medicalization and over-medicalization; (ii) demonstrates that the issue of defining appropriate limits of medicine cannot be solved by creating an optimum model of health; (iii) proposes four guiding questions to help distinguish medicalization from over-medicalization. The article should foster a normative analysis of the phenomenon of medicalization and contribute to the bioethical reflection on the boundaries of medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Boundaries of medicine; Guiding questions; Medicalization; Moral evaluation of medicalization; Over-medicalization; Pragmatic approach
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 29951940 PMCID: PMC6394498 DOI: 10.1007/s11019-018-9850-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Health Care Philos ISSN: 1386-7423
Medicalization impact assessment—own elaboration
| Over-medicalization-risks | Well-founded medicalization—opportunities | |
|---|---|---|
| Health effects | Harm to health caused by undue treatment (overdiagnosis, overprescription), iatrogenic diseases, health risk related to medical procedures, undesirable side effects of the medication administered | Possibility of using tools of evidence-based medicine, e.g. treating acute mental disorders at a psychiatric hospital instead of undergoing an exorcism |
| Economic effects | Suboptimal expenditure and waste of public or private money, e.g. costs of treatment of iatrogenic diseases and consequences of medication errors | Improvement in the financial situation of individuals whose condition has officially been recognised as a disease, e.g. through granting insurance coverage, reimbursement of medicines, entitlement to take a sick leave |
| Psychological effects | Stigmatising certain conditions, individuals or their behaviour as sick; restriction of personal freedom; pressure to adjust one’s own needs and behaviour to fit the prevailing standards, e.g. pharmacological treatment of low sexual desire in women | De-tabooisation of disease, explanatory value: patients gain the possibility to understand the causes of their condition and see that they are not the only ones to suffer from it |
| Social effects | Ignoring social, political and interpersonal background of certain phenomena and inadequate reactions stemming therefrom, such as treating victim’s masochistic personality disorder as the cause behind domestic violence | Raising health awareness of the public, recognising medical grounds for particular behaviours and starting treatment instead of punishing the patient, e.g. limited criminal liability of the mentally handicapped persons |
Exemplary use of four guiding questions—own elaboration
| Medicalized X | Question no. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
| Myocardial infarction | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| Cancer | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| Poliomyelitis | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| Schizophrenia | √ | √ | ? | √ |
| Alcoholism | √ | √ | – | √ |
| Anorexia | √ | √ | – | √ |
| Male-pattern hair loss (MPHL) | √ | – | √ | – |
| Prolonged grief disorder (PGD) | √ | – | – | – |
| Asymmetric labia as an indication for labiaplasty | ? | – | – | – |
| Mild attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) | ? | – | – | – |
| Mild restless legs syndrome (RLS) | ? | – | – | – |
| Hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD) | ? | – | – | – |
| Homosexuality | – | – | – | – |