Dolezal Luna
Department of Philosophy, Durham University, 50 Old Elvet, Durham City, DH1 3HN, UK.
Med Health Care Philos. 2015 Nov;18(4):567-76. doi: 10.1007/s11019-015-9654-5.
This article examines the phenomenology of body shame in the context of the clinical encounter, using the television program 'Embarrassing Bodies' as illustrative. I will expand on the insights of Aaron Lazare's 1987 article 'Shame and Humiliation in the Medical Encounter' where it is argued that patients often see their diseases and ailments as defects, inadequacies or personal shortcomings and that visits to doctors and medical professionals involve potentially humiliating physical and psychological exposure. I will start by outlining a phenomenology of shame in order to understand more clearly the effect shame about the body can have in terms of one's personal experience and, furthermore, one's interpersonal dynamics. I will then examine shame in the clinical encounter, linking body shame to the cultural stigma attached to illness, dysfunction and bodily frailty. I will furthermore explore how shame can be exacerbated or even incited by physicians through judgment and as a result of the power imbalance inherent to the physician-patient dynamic, compounded by the contemporary tendency to moralise about 'lifestyle' illnesses. Lastly, I will provide some reflections for how health care workers might approach patient shame in clinical practice.
本文以电视节目《尴尬的身体》为例,探讨临床诊疗过程中身体羞耻的现象学。我将详细阐述亚伦·拉扎尔1987年发表的文章《医疗诊疗中的羞耻与屈辱》中的观点,该文章认为,患者常常将自己的疾病和病痛视为缺陷、不足或个人缺点,而就医过程涉及潜在的令人屈辱的身体和心理暴露。我将首先概述羞耻的现象学,以便更清楚地理解身体羞耻在个人经历以及人际互动方面可能产生的影响。然后,我将审视临床诊疗中的羞耻,将身体羞耻与疾病、功能障碍和身体虚弱所附带的文化污名联系起来。此外,我还将探讨医生的评判以及医患关系中固有的权力不平衡如何加剧甚至引发羞耻感,这种不平衡因当代对“生活方式”疾病进行道德化评判的倾向而更加严重。最后,我将对医护人员在临床实践中如何应对患者的羞耻感提出一些思考。