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medicalisation การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • In " The Worried Well : The Depression Epidemic and the Medicalisation of our Sorrows"
  • His book, " Inventing Disease and Pushing Pills : Pharmaceutical Companies and the Medicalisation of Normal Life ", was reviewed by several journals.
  • Among the consequences of this were an increasing official preference for the psychological interpretation of shell shock, and a deliberate attempt to avoid the medicalisation of shell shock.
  • Whilst the exact cause for this is unknown, possible contributing factors include significant dietary changes, increased medicalisation of middle-aged women and increased media attention on the subject.
  • Timimi is skeptical of the benefits of medicalisation of the various problems subsumed under the categories of ADHD and Autism ( the latter co-authored with people with the diagnosis ).
  • Various 19th-century critiques of the newly emerging field of psychiatry overlap thematically with 20th-century anti-psychiatry, for example in their questioning of the medicalisation of " madness ".
  • This for example, includes recent sociological research on : gender, sleep and the life course; the social and health patterning of sleep quality and duration, and; the medicalisation of sleep.
  • Medicalization ( or medicalisation ) is the process by which human conditions and problems come to be defined and treated as medical conditions, and thus become the subject of medical study, diagnosis, prevention, or treatment.
  • This  technocratic takeover of pregnancy is not limited to western or developed nations but also affects conceptualisations and experiences in developing nations and is an example of the increasing medicalisation of pregnancy, a phenomenon that has social as well as technological ramifications.
  • It also expressed a major concern that " clients and the general public are negatively affected by the continued and continuous medicalisation of their natural and normal responses to their experiences . . . which demand helping responses, but which do not reflect illnesses so much as normal individual variation ".
  • Cordially back to you old chum ! p . s . for your assistance with English, " borderline " is a technical term in psychatric diagnosis, and thus what you said amounts to the'medicalisation'of Norman Finkelstein's critical approach to Israel, as though his scholarship displayed an unbalanced psychoneurotic symptomology.
  • Academics like Georgiann Davis and Morgan Holmes, and clinical psychologists like Tiger Devore argue that the term DSD was designed to " reinstitutionalise " medical authority over intersex bodies, making intersex bodies more treatable and more of a stigma " ( Holmes ) . or place intersex " neatly into medical turf and safely away from critics of its medicalisation " ( Davis ).
  • OII Europe states that " stigma, structural and verbal discrimination, harassment " as well as harmful practices and lack of legal recognition can lead to " inadequate education, broken careers and poverty ( including homelessness ) due to pathologisation and related trauma, a disturbed family life due to taboo and medicalisation, lack of self-esteem and a high risk of becoming suicidal ."
  • Klejn consistently advocates its decriminalisation and de-medicalisation but at the same time, as distinct of other liberal figures, he a ) considers homosexuality in its biological respect a pathology ( while, in cultural respects, norms of behaviour are conventional and culturally dependent ); b ) he does not consider gay-pride actions ( mistakenly called in Russia gay-parades ) to be reasonable and appropriate ( actions in defence of the civil rights of gays are another issue ); c ) he is sharply critical of the homosexual sub-culture.
  • His book " Sleep and Society ", for example, may be read as an early attempt to sketch the sociological dimensions and dynamics of sleep, including socio-cultural and historical variability in " how, when, where " and " with whom " we sleep; changing " ideas ", " meanings " and " values " associated with sleep through time, culture and context; the contested nature and status of sleep " rights " and sleep " roles " in the 24 / 7 society; the embodied and embedded nature of sleep in everyday / night life; the social patterning and social organisation of sleep; and the medicalisation of sleep.