Putting a Name to It: Diagnosis in Contemporary Society

Putting a Name to It: Diagnosis in Contemporary Society

by Annemarie Jutel
Putting a Name to It: Diagnosis in Contemporary Society

Putting a Name to It: Diagnosis in Contemporary Society

by Annemarie Jutel

Paperback(second edition)

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Overview

Outlines how the social dimensions of medical diagnosis can deepen our understanding of health.

Diagnosis is central to medicine. It creates order, explains illness, identifies treatments, and predicts outcomes. In Putting a Name to It, Annemarie Jutel presents medical diagnosis as more than a mere clinical tool, but as a social phenomenon with the potential to deepen our understanding of health, illness, and disease.

Jutel outlines how the sociology of diagnosis should function by situating it within the broader discipline, laying out the directions it should explore, and discussing how the classification of illness and the framing of diagnosis relate to social status and order. This second edition provides important updates to the groundbreaking first edition by incorporating new research that demonstrates how the social nature of diagnosis is just as important as the clinical. It includes new perspectives on diagnostic recognition, diagnostic coding, lay diagnosis, crowdsourced diagnosis, algorithmic diagnosis, diagnostic exploitation, diagnostic systems, stigmatizing diagnosis, and contested diagnosis. The new edition also features a case study of COVID-19 from a critical sociological perspective and a new conclusion.

Both a challenge and a call to arms, Putting a Name to It is a lucid, persuasive argument for formalizing, professionalizing, and advancing long-standing practice. Jutel's innovative, open approach and engaging arguments illustrate how diagnoses have the power to legitimize our medical ailments--and stigmatize them.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421448923
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 07/02/2024
Edition description: second edition
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.57(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Annemarie Jutel (WELLINGTON, NZ) is a professor of health and an associate dean at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington. She is the author of Diagnosis: Truths and Tales.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: What's in a Name?
Chapter 1: Lumping or Splitting: Classification in Medical Diagnosis
Chapter 2: Social Framing and Diagnosis: Corpulence and Fetal Death
Chapter 3: What's Wrong with Me? Diagnosis and the Patient-Doctor Relationship
Chapter 4: Contested Diagnoses and the Medically Unexplained
Chapter 5: Engines of Diagnosis
Chapter 6: Technologies of Diagnosis
Chapter 7: COVID-19 as a Sociological Phenomenon
Conclusion: Directions for the Sociology of Diagnosis
References
Index

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Putting a Name to It is a leap forward in understanding the importance of diagnosis. This most ordinary of activities is surprisingly complicated, shaped by political, economic, scientific, ethical, and cultural contexts. From clinical encounters to insurance reimbursements to social movements, diagnosis is very complex. Jutel’s synthesis, combined with interesting examples and lively theoretical approach, does a great job.
—Phil Brown, Brown University

Lively, engaging, and conceptually innovative, this book makes a significant contribution to the sociology of health and illness. Hitherto, diagnosis so pivotal to medical practice has not received comprehensive analysis; Jutel’s text rectifies this. The combination of empirical examples and social theorizing makes this text a must read for sociologists who want to understand medical practice, medical work, and medical knowledge.
—Dr. Sarah Nettleton, University of York

Eclectic and nuanced, Putting a Name to It effectively reveals the cultural complexity and sociological importance of diagnosis. Jutel's detailed and fascinating case studies skillfully and with considerable empathy capture the troubling world of people whose suffering cannot or will not be reduced to an agreed-upon mechanism.
—Robert Aronowitz, University of Pennsylvania

Phil Brown

Putting a Name to It is a leap forward in understanding the importance of diagnosis. This most ordinary of activities is surprisingly complicated, shaped by political, economic, scientific, ethical, and cultural contexts. From clinical encounters to insurance reimbursements to social movements, diagnosis is very complex. Jutel's synthesis, combined with interesting examples and lively theoretical approach does a great job.

Phil Brown, Brown University

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