[Medical communication about the management of depression, anxiety and sleeplessness in the Dutch women's magazine 'Margriet' between 1950 and 1960].

Gewina Pub Date : 2002-01-01
Jan Uttien, Toine Pieters, Frans J Meijman
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Abstract

The reporting of health and medicine in the media played an important role in the way people perceived, defined and coped with everyday health problems in the second half of the twentieth century. It was and still is predominantly a supply-market which is dominated by the medical approach; creating a medical aura of progress and the self-evidence of a cure. Although the medical approach figured also prominently in women's magazines, the reporting of illness and health is far more a product of supply and demand with a lively interaction between readers and the editorial office by the means of topic-related letter columns. As such women's magazines not only offer a gender-specific but also a more balanced source for acquiring a better understanding of how public definitions and perceptions of illness and health changed over time. In this article we will focus on the communication about the management of health problems related to depression, anxiety and sleeplessness in the prototypical Dutch women's magazine 'Margriet' between 1950 and 1960. Our guiding research question has been: how do notions about depression, anxiety and and about responsive health behaviour, of which psychotropic drug use is a part, change over time in the reporting of health problems in Margriet? This question is of particular interest to learn more about the historical dynamics of the culture- and gender-specific public interplay between patients and doctors in terms of conceptualising the aforementioned health problems and defining medical coping strategies. Among other things we show that although there was hardly any mention of any 'functional division of labour' between mind and body in 1950, the mind-body dichotomy started to play an important role in the way health problems were perceived in 1960.

[1950年至1960年荷兰女性杂志《玛格丽特》中关于抑郁、焦虑和失眠管理的医学交流]。
20世纪下半叶,媒体对健康和医学的报道在人们感知、定义和处理日常健康问题的方式上发挥了重要作用。它过去是,现在仍然是一个主要的供应市场,由医疗方法主导;创造一种医学进步的氛围和治愈的自证。尽管医学方法在女性杂志中也占有突出地位,但疾病和健康的报道更多地是供求关系的产物,通过与主题相关的信件专栏,读者和编辑部之间进行了生动的互动。因此,妇女杂志不仅提供了针对特定性别的资料,而且还提供了一个更平衡的来源,以便更好地了解公众对疾病和健康的定义和看法是如何随着时间的推移而变化的。在这篇文章中,我们将重点关注1950年至1960年期间典型的荷兰妇女杂志《玛格丽特》中关于管理与抑郁、焦虑和失眠有关的健康问题的交流。我们的指导研究问题是:关于抑郁,焦虑和反应性健康行为的概念,其中精神药物的使用是一部分,如何随着时间的推移在玛格丽特的健康问题报告中发生变化?就上述健康问题的概念化和确定医疗应对策略而言,了解更多关于患者和医生之间文化和性别特定的公共相互作用的历史动态,对这个问题特别感兴趣。除其他事项外,我们表明,尽管在1950年几乎没有提到任何精神和身体之间的“功能分工”,但在1960年,身心二分法开始在健康问题的感知方式中发挥重要作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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