McPherson Susan, Armstrong David
Tavistock & Portman NHS Trust, Belsize Centre, 94 Belsize Lane, London NW3 5NE, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 2006 Jan;62(1):50-8. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.05.021. Epub 2005 Jul 11.
The role of diagnostic labels in medicine is usually that of labelling an illness as a means of communication. Control over labelling processes in medicine is ordinarily imposed via medical schools, textbooks, education or by diagnostic manuals. Diagnostic labels often change following new discoveries in underlying pathology such as 'consumption' being relabelled as 'TB' or 'cancer'. Sub-types of broad diagnostic labels also often emerge from such discoveries e.g. 'lung cancer' or 'throat cancer'. In mental health, underlying pathology is the subject of ongoing debate spanning ideas including the brain as a faulty organ, faulty genetics and environmental problems. With controversy over pathology comes controversy over labels and the idea that labels may be used not just for communication, but as devices of social and professional control, arising out of a social process. This study explores the codification of the diagnostic label 'depression' which emerged in the twentieth-century and has proliferated with numerous sub-types over the last 40 years. The aim is to examine its social determinants and context. Medline is used as a data source for professional label usage. A range of depression sub-type labels in professional use was identified. This exercise revealed many official and 'unofficial' terms in professional use. Citation rate plots by year were then generated for these depression sub-type labels. The rise and fall of different labels are examined in relation to social determinants and context, including publication of diagnostic manuals DSM and ICD, power shifts in psychiatry, the discovery of psychiatric drugs and the shift from inpatient to community care. Exploring the changing use of official and unofficial labels over time in this way provides a novel historical perspective on the concept of depression in the late twentieth-century.
诊断标签在医学中的作用通常是将疾病进行标记,作为一种交流方式。医学中对标签过程的控制通常通过医学院校、教科书、教育或诊断手册来实施。随着基础病理学方面的新发现,诊断标签常常会发生变化,比如“痨病”被重新标记为“结核病”或“癌症”。宽泛诊断标签的子类型也常常源于此类发现,例如“肺癌”或“喉癌”。在心理健康领域,基础病理学是一个持续争论的主题,涉及诸多观点,包括将大脑视为有缺陷的器官、有缺陷的基因以及环境问题。随着病理学方面的争议而来的是标签方面的争议,以及标签可能不仅用于交流,还作为社会和专业控制手段的观点,这一观点源于社会过程。本研究探讨了二十世纪出现并在过去40年中衍生出众多子类型的诊断标签“抑郁症”的编纂情况。目的是考察其社会决定因素和背景。使用医学文献数据库(Medline)作为专业标签使用情况的数据源。确定了一系列专业使用的抑郁症子类型标签。这项工作揭示了专业使用中的许多官方和“非官方”术语。然后针对这些抑郁症子类型标签生成逐年的引用率图表。考察不同标签的兴衰与社会决定因素和背景的关系,包括诊断手册《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》(DSM)和《国际疾病分类》(ICD)的出版、精神病学中的权力转移、精神科药物的发现以及从住院治疗向社区护理的转变。以这种方式探究官方和非官方标签随时间变化的使用情况,为二十世纪后期抑郁症概念提供了一个全新的历史视角。