Rouse Carolyn Moxley
Department of Anthropology, Princeton University, NJ 08544, USA.
Cult Med Psychiatry. 2004 Sep;28(3):369-99. doi: 10.1023/b:medi.0000046428.45980.eb.
The emergence of two different sickle cell disease and disease/treatment paradigms in two clinics, Children's Hospital West (CHW) and Children's Hospital East (CHE), demonstrates how physicians can influence institutional regimes of truth to improve patient access. Physicians at both clinics, far from simply acquiescing to dominant biomedical paradigms, recognize that their paradigms are in part rhetorical strategies designed to subvert problematic staff biases and perceptions, and to encourage a particular "self-efficacy" ethic in the patients. This paper positions physicians as struggling within the discursive regimes of biomedicine to create an institutional space where the disease and the sickle cell patient matter, and where patients comply with the performative rules of that space. This paper explores how physicians, patients, and institutions collaborate in the construction of sickle cell disease in such a way that biomedicine becomes a plural, as opposed to a singular and oppressive, discursive regime.
在两家诊所——西部儿童医院(CHW)和东部儿童医院(CHE)出现的两种不同的镰状细胞病及疾病/治疗模式,表明了医生如何能够影响机构的真理制度以改善患者获得治疗的机会。两家诊所的医生远非简单地默认占主导地位的生物医学模式,他们认识到自己的模式部分是旨在颠覆有问题的工作人员偏见和观念,并在患者中鼓励一种特定的“自我效能”伦理的修辞策略。本文将医生定位为在生物医学的话语制度中挣扎,以创造一个疾病和镰状细胞病患者受到重视、患者遵守该空间的表演规则的机构空间。本文探讨了医生、患者和机构如何合作构建镰状细胞病,使得生物医学成为一种多元的而非单一压迫性的话语制度。