Biomedicalization of end-of-life conversations with medically frail older adults - Malleable and senescent bodies

被引:6
作者
Carter, Celina [1 ]
Mohammed, Shan [2 ]
Upshur, Ross [1 ]
Kontos, Pia [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Dalla Lana Sch Publ Hlth, 550 Coll St, Toronto, ON M6G 1B1, Canada
[2] Univ Toronto, Lawrence S Bloomberg Fac Nursing, Toronto, ON, Canada
[3] Univ Hlth Network, Kite Toronto Rehabil Inst, Toronto, ON, Canada
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
Biomedicalization; Frailty; Successful aging; Discourse; End-of-life conversations; Advance care planning; Older adults; PRIMARY-CARE; CARDIOPULMONARY-RESUSCITATION; SOCIAL GERONTOLOGY; ELDERLY-PATIENTS; HEALTH; RISK; AGE; COMMUNICATION; MEDICINE; DECLINE;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113428
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
The common practice of delaying and/or avoiding end-of-life conversations with medically frail older adults is an important clinical issue. Most research investigating this practice focuses on clinician training and developing conversation skills. Little is known about the socio-political factors shaping the phenomenon of end-of-life conversations between clinicians and medically frail older patients. Using the critical lens of biomedicalization we consider how two dominant discourses, successful aging and frailty, and subsequent constructions of bodies as malleable or senescent, shape patient subjectivities and influence normative expectations about appropriate healthcare conversations and the consumption of biomedicine for medically frail adults. We highlight the uneven ways medically frail older adults are clinically positioned as successful or frail agers and briefly discuss how gender, class, and race may impact this tension and ambiguity. We conclude by arguing that end-of-life conversations with medically frail older adults is constrained by the pervasiveness of the successful aging discourse and the tendency within medical institutions to construct older bodies as malleable and in need of medical intervention to promote health and longevity.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 73 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1996, Disciplining Old Age: The Formation of Gerontological Knowledge
[2]   Comparing Three Different Measures of Frailty in Medical Inpatients: Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study Examining 30-Day Risk of Readmission or Death [J].
Belga, Sara ;
Majumdar, Sumit R. ;
Kahlon, Sharry ;
Pederson, Jenelle ;
Lau, Darren ;
Padwal, Raj S. ;
Forhan, Mary ;
Bakal, Jeffrey A. ;
McAlister, Finlay A. .
JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE, 2016, 11 (08) :556-562
[3]   Planning for an (un)certain future: Choice within English end-of-life care [J].
Borgstrom, Erica .
CURRENT SOCIOLOGY, 2015, 63 (05) :700-713
[4]   Time to Improve Informed Consent for Dialysis: An International Perspective [J].
Brennan, Frank ;
Stewart, Cameron ;
Burgess, Hannah ;
Davison, Sara N. ;
Moss, Alvin H. ;
Murtagh, Fliss E. M. ;
Germain, Michael ;
Tranter, Shelley ;
Brown, Mark .
CLINICAL JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2017, 12 (06) :1001-1009
[5]   The Troubles of Telling: Managing Communication About the End of Life [J].
Broom, Alex ;
Kirby, Emma ;
Good, Phillip ;
Wootton, Julia ;
Adams, Jon .
QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH, 2014, 24 (02) :151-162
[6]   Dying and death within the culture of long-term care facilities in Canada [J].
Cable-Williams, Beryl ;
Wilson, Donna M. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OLDER PEOPLE NURSING, 2017, 12 (01)
[7]  
Canadian Frailty Network, 2020, AVOID FRILT
[8]   Recognising older frail patients near the end of life: What next? [J].
Cardona-Morrell, Magnolia ;
Lewis, Ebony ;
Suman, Sanjay ;
Haywood, Cilla ;
Williams, Marcella ;
Brousseau, Audrey-Anne ;
Greenaway, Sally ;
Hillman, Ken ;
Dent, Elsa .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2017, 45 :84-90
[9]  
Clarke Adele., 2010, Biomedicalization: Techno science, Health, DOI 10.1515/9780822391258
[10]   Biomedicalization: Technoscientific transformations of health, illness, and US biomedicine [J].
Clarke, AE ;
Shim, JK ;
Mamo, L ;
Fosket, JR ;
Fishman, JR .
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2003, 68 (02) :161-194