Journal Article10.1177/0306312704042620
Shaping the intimate: influences on the experience of everyday nerves.
139
TL;DR: A series of mechanisms whereby company marketing can both transform the perceptions of physicians and shape the experiences of those seeking treatment and the self-understanding of those not in treatment are reviewed.
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Abstract: Before 1980, most people experiencing common nervous problems and who sought medical help complained of anxiety and were treated for anxiety. Similar experiences increasingly led to complaints of or treatment for panic attacks in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and to complaints of or treatment for mood disorders by the mid-1990s. Today, such patients seem once again increasingly likely to complain of and be treated for anxiety. This paper reviews a series of mechanisms whereby company marketing can both transform the perceptions of physicians and shape the experiences of those seeking treatment and the self-understanding of those not in treatment. These include the standard ploys of company sales departments to increase demand for products, including celebrity endorsements, the sponsoring of educational events and a host of reminders. The portfolio of marketing manoeuvres has grown, though, by translating educational events and celebrity events into the arena of scientific research: clinical trials have increasing become part of the marketing of disorders and their treatments; ghost-written scientific papers are authored by celebrity researchers. The portfolio of marketing manoeuvres has also grown to encompass new ways of creating fashion through medical activism, by setting up patient groups and disease awareness campaigns. The result is a transformation and growth in disorders tailor-made to fit ever more visible drugs.
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Citations
The fight against disease mongering: Generating knowledge for action
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TL;DR: The Guest Editors of the Disease Mongering theme issue argue that there needs better research to identify, understand, and combat the threat to human health from the corporate-sponsored selling of sickness.
Ghosts in the Machine Publication Planning in the Medical Sciences
TL;DR: The medical research described here forms a new kind of corporate science, designed to look like traditional academic work, but performed largely to market products.
279
Regulatory objectivity and the generation and management of evidence in medicine.
TL;DR: By establishing endogenous forms of regulation, regulatory objectivity operates on a different plane and in a different mode from those suggested by analysts who treat all regulation as a form of rationalization imposed upon medicine from without.
247
The physical activity patterns of children with autism
TL;DR: Children with autism have a similar trend in physical activity patterns compared to their peers without autism; associated benefits and future research will be discussed.
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