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Classification of Illness01:17

Classification of Illness

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Classification, disease, and diagnosis.

Annemarie Jutel1

  • 1Graduate School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, Victoria University ofWellington, Wellington, New Zealand. annemarie.jutel@vuw.ac.nz

Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
|May 3, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Medical classification systems structure illness understanding and diagnosis. These systems are crucial for sociological study, influencing communication and authority in healthcare.

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Sociology
  • Philosophy of Medicine
  • Health Classification Systems

Background:

  • Classification is fundamental to medical practice and diagnosis.
  • Understanding classification is key to analyzing the social context of illness.
  • Historical traditions shape current medical classification principles.

Observation:

  • Medical classifications partition nature into meaningful diagnostic categories.
  • These systems stabilize and structure the study of illness.
  • Classifications are a form of human work integral to medical recognition.

Findings:

  • The article examines the aims and principles of medical classification.
  • It explores how these classifications are embodied in medical diagnosis.
  • Contemporary relevance of classification aims and principles is discussed.

Implications:

  • Medical classifications act as social framing devices.
  • They influence communication, enabling or disabling it.
  • Classifications assert or refute authority and are vital for sociological study.