Ordinary medicine

Medicine in the twenty-first century is constituted and propelled by the production of evidence. Once produced, the use of that evidence is complicated by features inherent in the American and global biomedical economy itself. With the exponential rise in the use of cardiac devices as my case study,...

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Main Author: Sharon R. Kaufman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2016-09-01
Series:Medicine Anthropology Theory
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4650
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spelling doaj-84de71a352774cbfa499cf76e20587e52021-04-22T08:41:00ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryMedicine Anthropology Theory2405-691X2016-09-013210.17157/mat.3.2.4374650Ordinary medicineSharon R. KaufmanMedicine in the twenty-first century is constituted and propelled by the production of evidence. Once produced, the use of that evidence is complicated by features inherent in the American and global biomedical economy itself. With the exponential rise in the use of cardiac devices as my case study, this think piece traces the links among evidence-based medicine, insurance reimbursement policies, and clinical trial outcomes to reveal how evidence produced by trial findings creates treatment standards. Those standards, in turn, expand what is thought to be ‘treatable’ by reconceptualizing risk as a condition that deserves intervention. Such standards affect what physicians recommend and what patients decide to do. The essay emphasizes that evidence-based medicine can be a source of anxiety that patients and families feel when considering how to proceed. It highlights the debates, increasingly common both within and beyond the health professions, about what is actually best as we grow older. It provides an example of how, today, most deaths, even among the very old, are considered premature. In an aging society, the treatment protocols that fall under the evidence-based medicine umbrella constitute an enormous truth-making regime that determines the goals of medicine and shapes health care consumers’ quandaries about medical intervention, and especially the quandary, for those in later life, about crossing the line of too much treatment.http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4650biotechnologyethicsmedical industrial complex
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sharon R. Kaufman
spellingShingle Sharon R. Kaufman
Ordinary medicine
Medicine Anthropology Theory
biotechnology
ethics
medical industrial complex
author_facet Sharon R. Kaufman
author_sort Sharon R. Kaufman
title Ordinary medicine
title_short Ordinary medicine
title_full Ordinary medicine
title_fullStr Ordinary medicine
title_full_unstemmed Ordinary medicine
title_sort ordinary medicine
publisher University of Edinburgh Library
series Medicine Anthropology Theory
issn 2405-691X
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Medicine in the twenty-first century is constituted and propelled by the production of evidence. Once produced, the use of that evidence is complicated by features inherent in the American and global biomedical economy itself. With the exponential rise in the use of cardiac devices as my case study, this think piece traces the links among evidence-based medicine, insurance reimbursement policies, and clinical trial outcomes to reveal how evidence produced by trial findings creates treatment standards. Those standards, in turn, expand what is thought to be ‘treatable’ by reconceptualizing risk as a condition that deserves intervention. Such standards affect what physicians recommend and what patients decide to do. The essay emphasizes that evidence-based medicine can be a source of anxiety that patients and families feel when considering how to proceed. It highlights the debates, increasingly common both within and beyond the health professions, about what is actually best as we grow older. It provides an example of how, today, most deaths, even among the very old, are considered premature. In an aging society, the treatment protocols that fall under the evidence-based medicine umbrella constitute an enormous truth-making regime that determines the goals of medicine and shapes health care consumers’ quandaries about medical intervention, and especially the quandary, for those in later life, about crossing the line of too much treatment.
topic biotechnology
ethics
medical industrial complex
url http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4650
work_keys_str_mv AT sharonrkaufman ordinarymedicine
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