Experiencing Cancer. An Ethnographic Study on Illness and Disease.

Q3 Medicine
Christine Holmberg
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Cancer is seen as a 'dread disease' with a long and powerful history that remains resistant to defeat. It is a byword for suffering, pain and death. An unprecedented level of research spending and biomedical engagement offering new treatment options and hopes for a cure goes hand in hand with patient-led movements disseminating widespread public narratives of hope and survivorship. A key paradigm in these public narratives of hope and cure has been early detection of disease, with breast cancer, as the most frequent cancer among women, at the forefront of early detection campaigns. This chapter investigates the experiences behind the public face of breast cancer. It interrogates what it means to have breast cancer in the light of heroic stories of survivorship and fight using the theoretical concepts of illness-the subjective experience of feeling unwell-and disease-bodily pathologies that are identified through biomedical diagnostic technologies. With early detection becoming the primary mode of practice in breast cancer, illness has  to be re-conceptualized. If a woman is to undergo treatment after a diagnosis of asymptomatic disease-without symptoms being present in her lifeworld-she has to cognitively understand the severity of the disease, and assume that she would die without treatment. The absence of bodily experiences of symptoms is irrelevant: it is the provision of information through which illness can manifest. The shock of diagnosis, as so often illustrated in cancer narratives, is therefore necessary in order to transform disease into an illness trajectory associated with biomedical treatment. The particular illness experiencehas profound and long-lasting consequences for a woman's life. Understanding the suffering associated with such disease conceptions as a necessary part of the illness experience could help us to improve health care services for those afflicted.

经历过癌症。疾病与疾病的民族志研究。
癌症被视为一种“可怕的疾病”,有着悠久而强大的历史,仍然难以战胜。它是苦难、痛苦和死亡的代名词。前所未有的研究支出和生物医学参与提供了新的治疗选择和治愈的希望,与患者主导的运动携手并进,广泛传播希望和幸存者的公众叙事。在这些关于希望和治愈的公共叙述中,一个关键范例是早期发现疾病,乳腺癌作为妇女中最常见的癌症,处于早期发现运动的前沿。这一章调查了乳腺癌公众形象背后的经历。它通过幸存者的英雄故事和疾病的理论概念——通过生物医学诊断技术识别的身体不适和疾病的主观体验——来询问患有乳腺癌意味着什么。随着早期检测成为乳腺癌的主要实践模式,疾病必须重新概念化。如果一名妇女在被诊断为无症状疾病后接受治疗——在她的生活中没有任何症状——她必须从认知上理解疾病的严重性,并假设她不治疗就会死亡。没有症状的身体体验是无关紧要的:它提供了疾病可以表现出来的信息。因此,诊断的震惊,正如癌症叙事中经常描述的那样,对于将疾病转化为与生物医学治疗相关的疾病轨迹是必要的。这种特殊的疾病经历会对女性的生活产生深远而持久的影响。将与此类疾病概念相关的痛苦理解为疾病经历的必要组成部分,可以帮助我们改善对患者的保健服务。
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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CiteScore
5.60
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