Department of Medical Ethics at CAU Kiel, Kiel, Germany.
Med Health Care Philos. 2022 Dec;25(4):671-680. doi: 10.1007/s11019-022-10109-9. Epub 2022 Aug 11.
One popular description of current society is that it is a depressed society and medical evidence about depression's prevalence may well make such an estimation plausible. However, such normative-critical assessments surrounding depression have to date usually operated with a one-sided understanding of depression. This understanding widely neglects the various ways depression manifests as well as its comorbidities. This becomes evident at the latest when considering one of depression's most prominent and well-known comorbidities: chronic pain. Against this background, we aim in this article to substantiate our leading claim that the phenomenal interconnection between depression and chronic pain must be acknowledged in the global diagnosis of a depressive society. Thus, we argue here for a complementation of the dominant interpretation of a depressed society. This would support the overcoming of oversimplified images and estimations about depression in current society and further, help to recognize chronic pain properly on the larger scale of assessments that address society as a whole.
目前有一种流行的说法,认为当今社会是一个压抑的社会,而有关抑郁普遍性的医学证据可能使这种说法变得合理。然而,迄今为止,围绕抑郁的这种规范-批判评估通常基于对抑郁的片面理解。这种理解广泛忽视了抑郁表现的各种方式及其共病现象。当考虑到抑郁最突出和广为人知的共病之一:慢性疼痛时,这一点尤其明显。有鉴于此,我们旨在本文中证实我们的主要主张,即必须在全球范围内诊断抑郁社会时承认抑郁和慢性疼痛之间的现象联系。因此,我们在这里主张对抑郁社会的主导解释进行补充。这将有助于克服当前社会中对抑郁的简单化形象和估计,并进一步帮助在更广泛的评估中正确认识慢性疼痛,这些评估涉及整个社会。