SYMPTOMER OG SOCIALITET: Interview med Dorte Effersøe Gannik

Forfattere

  • Kåre Jansbøl
  • Katrine Schepelern Johansen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i58.106819

Resumé

Dorte Effersøe Gannik’s book Social Theory of Disease: A Situational Perspective

is the revised version of her doctoral thesis in medical sociology. In the book,

Gannik uses empirical research on backaches to construct a general sociological

theory of disease. In this interview with Jansbøl and Johansen, Gannik primarily

talks about the theoretical aspects of her work. Gannik’s theory of disease helps

us reach a more precise understanding of connections between the two complex

entities “disease” and “the social”. Gannik claims that disease is far more socially

embedded than the health sector thus far has acknowledged, and she points out

that factors outside of the health sector determine whether or not a person interprets

some kind of physical discomfort as a symptom of disease severe enough

to seek medical attention for. Even after a person has been transformed into a

patient, many of his or her symptom-related actions are still more often determined

by conditions in the home, at work, or among friends than it is by strictly

medical matters. Gannik claims that the health sector hitherto has had an inadequate

understanding of disease, because its spokespersons have defined it as a

fundamentally biological entity which is largely unaffected by social conditions.

In contrast, Gannik argues that disease can only be properly understood if one

seriously takes into consideration the social lives of patients, inside the health

sector, as well as outside it.

 

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Publiceret

2008-12-01

Citation/Eksport

Jansbøl, K., & Johansen, K. S. (2008). SYMPTOMER OG SOCIALITET: Interview med Dorte Effersøe Gannik. Tidsskriftet Antropologi, (58). https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i58.106819

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