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Tragedy, utopia and medical progress.

S Fredriksen1

  • 1University of Oslo, PO Box 1130, N-0318 Oslo, Norway. stale.fredriksen@medisin.uio.no

Journal of Medical Ethics
|August 1, 2006
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Medicalization, framed as tragedy, reveals how medical progress creates insecurity alongside benefits. Understanding this tragic conflict, exemplified by sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) prevention, is key.

Area of Science:

  • Medical Ethics
  • Public Health
  • Sociology of Medicine

Background:

  • The concept of medicalization is examined through contrasting utopian and tragic frameworks.
  • Utopian views attribute setbacks to errors, while tragedy acknowledges inherent conflicts and their consequences.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose that a tragic framework offers a more insightful understanding of medicalization than a utopian one.
  • To explore how medical progress, while empowering, also highlights human fallibility and generates insecurity.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis juxtaposing utopian and tragic perspectives on medicalization.
  • Case illustration using epidemiological data on sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).

Main Results:

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  • Medicalization arises from tragic conflicts inherent in medical progress, not just errors.
  • Epidemiological findings on prone vs. supine infant sleep positions for SIDS prevention illustrate this duality.
  • While offering solutions (supine sleeping), new uncertainties emerge regarding other risk factors.

Conclusions:

  • A tragic lens better explains the complex nature of medicalization and its associated insecurities.
  • Medical advancements create dilemmas where benefits are intertwined with unavoidable risks and uncertainties.
  • The ongoing process of medicalization necessitates continued vigilance and research into potential overlooked factors.