Academic literature on the topic 'Medicalisation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Medicalisation"

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Colucci, Mario. "Medicalisation." Journal of Science Communication 05, no. 01 (March 21, 2006): C02. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.05010302.

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Medicalisation means first of all a science – medicine – going beyond its boundaries: from the art of healing individuals, or systematically classifying useful information to treat diseases affecting individuals, it gradually turns into a pervasive development of knowledge and practices that, from the 18th century onward, are applied to collective issues, which traditionally are not regarded as medical issues, thus moving toward large-scale protection of the social body health. The physical wellbeing of people, as well as the protection and improvement of their health condition, become one of the main objectives of the political power, which aims not only at dealing with social marginalisation and poverty to make them productive, but also at “planning society as sphere of physical wellbeing, optimal health and longevity”.
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Gould, Debby. "Subliminal medicalisation." British Journal of Midwifery 10, no. 7 (July 2002): 418. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjom.2002.10.7.10583.

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Rose, Nikolas. "Beyond medicalisation." Lancet 369, no. 9562 (February 2007): 700–702. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(07)60319-5.

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Melzer, D. "Genetics and medicalisation." BMJ 324, no. 7342 (April 13, 2002): 863–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.324.7342.863.

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Duster, Troy. "Medicalisation of race." Lancet 369, no. 9562 (February 2007): 702–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(07)60320-1.

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Rothwell, Heather. "Medicalisation of childbearing." British Journal of Midwifery 3, no. 6 (June 2, 1995): 318–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjom.1995.3.6.318.

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Van Eekert, Nina. "To Medicalise or Not to Medicalise: Is that the Question?" Afrika Focus 34, no. 1 (June 9, 2021): 172–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2031356x-34010007.

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Abstract Today, female genital cutting (fgc) is more often performed by health professionals. In this dissertation we aim to answer the question of why mothers opt to medicalise their daughters’ cut, and how this decision relates to their social position within their community. We focus on Egypt and Kenya. The first important conclusion of our research is that increasing medicalisation and decreasing fgc prevalence can coexist. Moreover, we identify three major drivers behind mothers’ choice to medicalise their daughters’ cut. Firstly, mothers argue that they opt for a medicalised cut to reduce the health risks related to the cut. They seek a less harmful but still culturally acceptable alternative. Secondly, the medicalisation of fgc is socially stratified. Thirdly, medicalisation may act as a social norm in itself. In conclusion, we state that the debate about medicalisation should be more nuanced and that the general discourse on medicalisation should be challenged and empirically grounded.
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Christiaens, Wendy, and Edwin van Teijlingen. "Quattro significati della medicalizzazione: il caso del parto." SALUTE E SOCIETÀ, no. 2 (July 2009): 133–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/ses2009-002009.

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- Medicalisation is a commonly used and ‘easily' understood concept among health care providers and researchers as well as in popular culture, but it is contested within medical sociology. This paper distinguishes between four meanings bestowed on medicalisation to enhance its conceptual clarity, using the example of childbirth as an illustration. Within the first generation of medicalisation theory, largely covering the ideas of Freidson, Conrad and Illich, we distinguish between three layers of meaning: (a) the origin of the medical model; (b) medical imperialism; and (c) iatrogenesis. The first meaning refers to the origin of the medical knowledge. In the second meaning daily life becomes increasingly defined in terms of health and illness, hence incorporating a growing number of life domains and social problems. The power of the medical discourse and the associated social control are central issues. The third meaning is represented by the critical or conflict sociological approach, in which medicalisation is interpreted as an exaggeration of medical control, hence emphasising its iatrogenic (‘sick-making') effects. The second generation medicalisation theory addresses a changed and more complex organisation of health care. New medicalisation tendencies surpass the old ones, adding a new layer of meanings to the concept: the optimalisation of normal characteristics or processes. Hence, normal phenomena become problematic and a new consuming market is created. A key message from our paper is that poor conceptualisation of medicalisation as an analytical tool endangers the quality and comparability of social scientific research and interdisciplinary collaboration.Keywords: medicalization, birth, iatrogenesis, medical imperialism, sociology of health, health care.Parole chiave: medicalizzazione, parto, iatrogenesi, imperialismo medico, sociologia della salute, assistenza sanitaria.
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Christiaens, Wendy, and Edwin van Teijlingen. "Four Meanings of Medicalization: Childbirth as a Case study." SALUTE E SOCIETÀ, no. 2 (July 2009): 123–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/ses2009-en2009.

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- Medicalisation is a commonly used and ‘easily' understood concept among health care providers and researchers as well as in popular culture, but it is contested within medical sociology. This paper distinguishes between four meanings bestowed on medicalisation to enhance its conceptual clarity, using the example of childbirth as an illustration. Within the first generation of medicalisation theory, largely covering the ideas of Freidson, Conrad and Illich, we distinguish between three layers of meaning: (a) the origin of the medical model; (b) medical imperialism; and (c) iatrogenesis. The first meaning refers to the origin of the medical knowledge. In the second meaning daily life becomes increasingly defined in terms of health and illness, hence incorporating a growing number of life domains and social problems. The power of the medical discourse and the associated social control are central issues. The third meaning is represented by the critical or conflict sociological approach, in which medicalisation is interpreted as an exaggeration of medical control, hence emphasising its iatrogenic (‘sick-making') effects. The second generation medicalisation theory addresses a changed and more complex organisation of health care. New medicalisation tendencies surpass the old ones, adding a new layer of meanings to the concept: the optimalisation of normal characteristics or processes. Hence, normal phenomena become problematic and a new consuming market is created. A key message from our paper is that poor conceptualisation of medicalisation as an analytical tool endangers the quality and comparability of social scientific research and interdisciplinary collaboration.Keywords: medicalization, birth, iatrogenesis, medical imperialism, sociology of health, health care.Parole chiave: medicalizzazione, parto, iatrogenesi, imperialismo medico, sociologia della salute, assistenza sanitaria.
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Piciocchi, Cinzia. "The Definition of Health and Illness between Juridification and Medicalisation: A Private/Public Interest Perspective." European Journal of Health Law 25, no. 2 (March 9, 2018): 177–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718093-12520355.

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Abstract This article addresses the interactions between medicalisation and juridification and their impact on the concepts of health and illness. Juridification, de-juridification, medicalisation and de-medicalisation are defined in many different ways and it is particularly interesting to see how they affect each other, impinging on individual freedom and contributing to shaping the definition of health and illness and their public understanding. Juridification and medicalisation are particularly affected by the shifting perceptions of the public and private interests at stake, even if the identification of the public or private interest is not an easy task, especially when ethically controversial issues come into play. Nevertheless, the private/public interest analysis is a crucial issue in the understanding of the interactions between these two concepts and in the identification of the boundary lines between them, giving an important key to the understanding of their influence on the rights and liberties at stake.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Medicalisation"

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Dura, Vila G. "Medicalisation of sadness, depression and spiritual distress." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2015. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1461034/.

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A qualitative study was conducted amongst 57 practising Catholics in Spain: students, priests, and contemplative monks and nuns. Through semi-structured interviews, participant observation and ethnography their understanding of severe sadness and the difference with pathological sadness, coping mechanisms and help-seeking behaviour were explored. The participants clearly differentiated between sadness in response to a cause, sadness that “made sense”, and cases where sadness was not explained by the context, sadness that “did not make sense”. The former was seen as a normal reaction to adversity which should be resolved by the individuals’ social, cultural and religious resources, while the latter was likely to be conceptualised as pathological, along the lines of depression, warranting psychiatric consultation. It was also found that religion played a crucial role in the way sadness was understood and resolved: symptoms that otherwise might have been described as evidence of a depressive episode were often understood in those more religiously committed within the framework of the “Dark Night of the Soul” narrative, an active transformation of emotional distress into a process of self-reflection, attribution of religious meaning and spiritual growth. A complex portrayal of the role of the spiritual director and the parish priest in helping those undergoing sadness and depression emerged, containing positive aspects and criticisms of some priests’ lack of commitment and mental health training. This study emphasises the importance of taking into account the context of depressive symptoms, as the absence of an appropriate context is seemingly what made participants conceptualise them as abnormal. It also warns about the risks of medicalising normal episodes of sadness and raises questions about the lack of face validity of the current diagnostic classification for depressive disorder, which exclusively uses descriptive criteria. The thesis concludes by making some suggestions regarding differentiating normal from pathological sadness and how to incorporate existential issues into clinical practice.
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OLIVIER, DONADIEU SYLVIE. "Medicalisation du secours en milieu vertical urbain et industriel." Aix-Marseille 2, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992AIX20020.

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BARDIN, ERIC. "Interet de la medicalisation precoce des traumatises craniens graves." Reims, 1989. http://www.theses.fr/1989REIMM004.

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Arribas-Ayllon, Michael. "On the medicalisation of welfare : towards a genealogy of dependency." Thesis, Cardiff University, 2005. http://orca.cf.ac.uk/54255/.

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The thesis combines genealogical investigation with an 'analytics of government' to diagnose present reforms of Australian Social Security. The Australian example poses a new diagram of knowledge/power relations linked to early nineteenth century debates on pauperism and poor policy. Characteristic of 'advanced' liberal government, social welfare is transformed from an income redistribution scheme to a behaviour modification regime. This raises serious implications for contemporary citizenship, subjectification and the apparent flexibility of wage-labour. By re-tracing modern welfare's conditions of possibility, the present is reconstructed to breach the naturalness and self-evidence with which we accept the current crisis of welfare as problems of 'community', 'dependency' and 'participation'. The case is made that present control strategies rapidly recycle clients into flexible wage-labour via human technologies that seek the ethical and moral reconstruction of the poor. But diagnosis is a limited enterprise if it fails to consult the experiences of those to which these reforms are applied. A discursive analysis of 12 interview participants deemed 'at risk' of welfare dependency explores themes of labour market activity, welfare regulation and practices of freedom to understand how welfare subjects manage and transform their lives. Interviews confirm the existence of discourses that reinscribe distinctions between the deserving and undeserving poor, intensify stigma of welfare receipt, and increase ambivalence about labour market security. Furthermore, a psychological subject emerges as one of two positions: it reactivates the pathologies of abject sectors of the population, while shoring-up capacities for rational self- management. Arguably, psychology has become a key technology for the ethical reconstruction of conduct and the calculated management of risk. Discourses of poverty are now recast as problems of 'the excluded' as welfare rationalities monitor and prevent behaviours that lead to market passivity. Like early nineteenth century statements on poverty, citizenship is now conditional upon moral improvement. And while neo-classical solutions have succeeded in moving the welfare debate away from contradictions of political economy, welfare reform risks producing a sector of the population that is low paid, casualised, under-protected from risk, insecure and desocialised.
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Songhurst, Leah. "The medicalisation of happiness : a history of St. John's wort." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10036/3060.

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This thesis explores the histories of mild to moderate depression and the use of over the counter (OTC) St. John’s wort (St. John’s wort) during the 1990s. In doing so it not only investigates the diagnosis and definition of mental illnesses, it also raises questions about the interface between conventional and alternative medicine. Using a variety of printed sources, including popular media articles, scientific and medical journal publications, and St. John’s wort self-help books, a number of historical themes are explored. This thesis takes issue with existing medical historical studies of depression. Firstly it is argued that they have presented progressive depression histories. Secondly, it is suggested that they have retrospectively diagnosed depression on the basis of similar symptoms. It is therefore argued that illness is specific to the time in which it exists and should be understood within its own historical timeframe. During the 1990s standardised St. John’s wort was promoted as a natural and safe remedy. Adverts and media reports also highlighted the fact that it had a long medical history. Although this thesis establishes that the plant has been traditionally used to treat physical illnesses, it seems that a growing distrust of conventional antidepressants, combined with an established interest in alternative medicine, encouraged some lay people to use the remedy to treat mild mood disorders. It is further argued that lay people have a history of self-treating minor mental illnesses using preparatory and OTC remedies such as preparatory nerve tonics. Not only did lay people desire autonomous treatments, it also seems that standardised St. John’s wort provided a functional role as an OTC remedy. By the 1990s the concepts of responsible self-care and self-treatment were being actively encouraged by medical authorities. Therefore this thesis reclassifies the passive mild to moderately depressed patient as an active consumer. Following an analysis of the popular media it is suggested that the 1990s coverage of depression and its treatments was confusing. Indeed, depression and its treatment with conventional medicines and St. John’s wort were sometimes presented as part of a wider life style choice. Finally, it is argued that by the 1990s standardised St. John’s wort received the same scientific and medical scrutiny as conventional medicines. It is therefore suggested that the remedy represents a situation in which the boundaries between conventional and alternative medicines have become increasingly indistinguishable.
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Iles, S. C. "Patriarchal therapeutism : The medicalisation of deviance, with particular reference to women." Thesis, University of Kent, 1986. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.371144.

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TEILLOL, DOMINIQUE. "Medicalisation des epreuves sportives : etude prospective et experience du s.a.m.u. 42." Saint-Etienne, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1991STET6228.

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OHAYON, ALAIN. "Le programme de medicalisation du systeme d'information hospitalier : description et analyse." Aix-Marseille 2, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988AIX20199.

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ERBETTA, BRUNO. "Les secours souterrains en midi-pyrenees : proposition d'une strategie de medicalisation." Toulouse 3, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993TOU31032.

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You, Su-Fen. "Health, policy and medicalisation : a case study of Taiwan's health care reforms." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2003. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/55733/.

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This thesis charts the rising importance of the state in extending the influence of modern medicine, contexualised within the history and political-economic dynamics of the health care reforms in Taiwan, a leading Newly Industrialised Country (NIC) which has a distinguished record of health improvement. It highlights the processes by which health care reforms represented a shift towards medicalisation, particularly as consolidated by the creation of a universal National Health Insurance (NHI) system in 1995. The thesis seeks to analyse these processes by bridging the gap between medical sociology and health policy evaluation. It deploys a range of methods: historical analysis of secondary sources and multiple methods of data collection. These include qualitative in-depth interviews with key actors, a questionnaire survey and relevant policy documents. This thesis employs an overarching framework for analysis, which embraces both the 'political economy' and the 'cultural critique' approaches to health, in ways which seek to integrate discussion of policy issues and developments at the macro, meso, and micro-levels. It starts by locating the NHI reform against longer-term historical processes of modernisation, often as a result of outside influences, and the associated transformation of medical paradigms that occurred in different periods. It charts how particular structural factors have impinged on medicine to enable it to become dominant collegiate profession, with special reference to the role of the state promoting the legitimation of particular modes of medical intervention. The thesis highlights the fact that the NHI has extended the influence of doctors, paradoxically also provides the basis by which medical autonomy has been undermined. On the other hand, it charts the social impacts of modern medical care, and argues that the NHI has played an important role in stimulating the process medicalisation and consequently fostered a culture of dependency and passivity contained in medical technology and in the healing relationship. This thesis is a reminder that the contemporary Taiwanese health care state is arriving at a moment of crisis, and that deep reflection on the strengths and weaknesses of the NHI reform is necessary in order to deal with problems associated with growing medicalisation, public demands for greater social equity, and new threats to health, the latest being SARS.
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Books on the topic "Medicalisation"

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Fondras, Jean Claude. La douleur: Expérience et medicalisation. Paris: Belles lettres, 2009.

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Njue, Carolyne. Medicalisation of FGC among the Abagusii in Nyanza Province, Kenya. Washington, DC: Frontiers in Reproductive Health, Population Council, 2004.

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Singh, Ajai R., and Shakuntala A. Singh. Issues in schizophrenia, medicalisation, stigma, biomedicine, journalology, and other essays. Mumbai, India: Mens Sana Research Foundation and Medknow Publications (Wolters Kluwer), 2012.

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Darmon, Pierre. Medicins et assassins a la Belle Epoque: La medicalisation du crime. Paris: Seuil, 1989.

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Inventing disease and pushing pills: Pharmaceutical companies and the medicalisation of normal life. Milton Park, Oxon: Routledge, 2006.

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Holmes, Guy. Clinicians' perceptions of psychological distress: The effect of gender of client on judgments of sexual abuse and the medicalisation of clients. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 1995.

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Medicalisation of Everyday Life: A Critical Perspective. Macmillan Education UK, 2020.

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Degerman, Dan. Political Agency and the Medicalisation of Negative Emotions. Edinburgh University Press, 2022.

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Degerman, Dan. Political Agency and the Medicalisation of Negative Emotions. Edinburgh University Press, 2022.

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Degerman, Dan. Political Agency and the Medicalisation of Negative Emotions. Edinburgh University Press, 2022.

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Book chapters on the topic "Medicalisation"

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Thomas, Felicity. "Medicalisation." In Routledge International Handbook of Critical Issues in Health and Illness, 23–33. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003185215-4.

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Quattri, Francesca. "Medicalisation in Healthcare." In Gaps and Actions in Health Improvement from Hong Kong and Beyond, 401–19. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-4491-0_27.

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Chamberlain, John Martyn. "Biomedicine, Medicalisation and Risk." In The Sociology of Medical Regulation, 21–44. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-4896-5_2.

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Abbott, Pamela, Claire Wallace, and Melissa Tyler. "The Medicalisation of Reproduction." In The Sociology of Healthcare, 13–22. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-26654-5_2.

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Einion, Alys. "The medicalisation of childbirth." In The Social Context of Birth, 169–80. Third edition. | Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315378077-11.

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Misselbrook, David. "Sociological models: ii Medicalisation." In Thinking About Patients, 133–48. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781032645032-8.

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Amzat, Jimoh, and Oliver Razum. "Medicalisation and Client-Practitioner Relations." In Medical Sociology in Africa, 185–205. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-03986-2_9.

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Boyle, Louise E. "The medicalisation of anxious distress." In Anxious Geographies, 13–25. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003206880-2.

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Lewis, Jane. "The Medicalisation of Childbirth: Hospitalisation." In The Politics of Motherhood, 117–39. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003472308-8.

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Fletcher, James Rupert. "Pathologisation, (bio)medicalisation and biopolitics." In A Critical History of Dementia Studies, 13–26. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003290353-3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Medicalisation"

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Hartling, Ole Johannes, Theo Boer, Morten Magelssen, and Morten Horn. "16 Assisted death – an area of medicalisation of death." In Preventing Overdiagnosis meeting Abstracts 2023. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ebm-2023-pod.16.

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Ciolfi Felice, Marianela, Marie Louise Juul Søndergaard, and Madeline Balaam. "Resisting the Medicalisation of Menopause: Reclaiming the Body through Design." In CHI '21: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3411764.3445153.

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Cardona, Magnolia, Ebony Lewis, Paulina Stehlik, Shelley Sun, and Justin Clark. "21 Inappropriate hospitalisations, aggressive treatments, and insufficient deprescribing: the medicalisation of death from natural causes." In Preventing Overdiagnosis Abstracts, December 2019, Sydney, Australia. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjebm-2019-pod.35.

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Van Eekert, Nina, Els Leye, and Sarah Van de Velde. "The association between women’s social status and the medicalisation of female genital cutting in Egypt." In Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting at the intersection of qualitative, quantitative and mixed method research. Experiences from Africa and Europe. Academic & Scientific Publishers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.46944/9789057187162.14.

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Reports on the topic "Medicalisation"

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Bedri, Nafisa, Huda Sherfi, Ghada Rodwan, Sara Elhadi, and Wafa Elamin. Medicalisation of female genital mutilation/cutting in Sudan: Shift in types and providers. Population Council, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh6.1023.

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Shell-Duncan, Bettina, Carolyne Njue, and Zhuzhi Moore. Trends in medicalisation of female genital mutilation/cutting: What do the data reveal? Population Council, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh6.1038.

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Obianwu, Otibho, Adetayo Adetunji, and Osasuyi Dirisu. Understanding medicalisation of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C): A qualitative study of parents and health workers in Nigeria. Population Council, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh6.1039.

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The medicalisation of female genital mutilation/cutting in Kenya: Perspectives of families and health care providers. Population Council, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh6.1032.

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