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Rationalities and Non-rationalities in Clinical Encounters: Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Hormone Replacement Therapy

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Rationalities and Non-rationalities in Clinical Encounters: Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Hormone Replacement Therapy. / Roberts, Celia; valentine, kylie; Fraser, Suzanne.
In: Science as Culture, Vol. 18, No. 2, 2009, p. 165-181.

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Roberts C, valentine K, Fraser S. Rationalities and Non-rationalities in Clinical Encounters: Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Hormone Replacement Therapy. Science as Culture. 2009;18(2):165-181. doi: 10.1080/09505430902885524

Author

Roberts, Celia ; valentine, kylie ; Fraser, Suzanne. / Rationalities and Non-rationalities in Clinical Encounters: Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Hormone Replacement Therapy. In: Science as Culture. 2009 ; Vol. 18, No. 2. pp. 165-181.

Bibtex

@article{a7d2d46e23204c87aae2b13a22efe6c6,
title = "Rationalities and Non-rationalities in Clinical Encounters: Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Hormone Replacement Therapy",
abstract = "Rationality is central to modern biomedicine: not only are doctors expected to diagnose and prescribe rationally according to evidence-based guidelines, but patients are increasingly expected to behave in rational ways in their encounters with medical practitioners. Patients are offered guidance on how to ask rational questions of their doctors, and how to make reasoned decisions about what treatment options to pursue. Here, we examine the operation of such rationalities and their {\textquoteleft}others{\textquoteright} in two kinds of clinical encounter: those around methadone maintenance treatment, and those around hormone replacement therapy. In these contrasting but related cases, we argue, clients/patients struggle to perform the kinds of rationality figured in contemporary biomedical discourses. The historical freight of non-rationality attached to the medical conditions being treated, namely {\textquoteleft}addiction{\textquoteright} and the menopause, means that clients/patients are enacted as intrinsically non-rational, which renders suspect their capacity to make the kinds of reasoned decisions that contemporary patients are expected to make. Engaging with the work of cultural studies theorist, Eve Sedgwick, we suggest that such enactments can be understood as a form of habit, produced within the complex social space of the clinical encounter. It is only through taking seriously the habits of rationality and non-rationality in which particular kinds of patients are enacted that we can begin to understand the inevitable limitations of the rationalist model of clinical encounter presented as {\textquoteleft}ideal{\textquoteright} in contemporary health discourses.",
keywords = "Clinical encounter, pharmaceuticals, methadone, rationality",
author = "Celia Roberts and kylie valentine and Suzanne Fraser",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1080/09505430902885524",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "165--181",
journal = "Science as Culture",
issn = "1470-1189",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Rationalities and Non-rationalities in Clinical Encounters: Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Hormone Replacement Therapy

AU - Roberts, Celia

AU - valentine, kylie

AU - Fraser, Suzanne

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Rationality is central to modern biomedicine: not only are doctors expected to diagnose and prescribe rationally according to evidence-based guidelines, but patients are increasingly expected to behave in rational ways in their encounters with medical practitioners. Patients are offered guidance on how to ask rational questions of their doctors, and how to make reasoned decisions about what treatment options to pursue. Here, we examine the operation of such rationalities and their ‘others’ in two kinds of clinical encounter: those around methadone maintenance treatment, and those around hormone replacement therapy. In these contrasting but related cases, we argue, clients/patients struggle to perform the kinds of rationality figured in contemporary biomedical discourses. The historical freight of non-rationality attached to the medical conditions being treated, namely ‘addiction’ and the menopause, means that clients/patients are enacted as intrinsically non-rational, which renders suspect their capacity to make the kinds of reasoned decisions that contemporary patients are expected to make. Engaging with the work of cultural studies theorist, Eve Sedgwick, we suggest that such enactments can be understood as a form of habit, produced within the complex social space of the clinical encounter. It is only through taking seriously the habits of rationality and non-rationality in which particular kinds of patients are enacted that we can begin to understand the inevitable limitations of the rationalist model of clinical encounter presented as ‘ideal’ in contemporary health discourses.

AB - Rationality is central to modern biomedicine: not only are doctors expected to diagnose and prescribe rationally according to evidence-based guidelines, but patients are increasingly expected to behave in rational ways in their encounters with medical practitioners. Patients are offered guidance on how to ask rational questions of their doctors, and how to make reasoned decisions about what treatment options to pursue. Here, we examine the operation of such rationalities and their ‘others’ in two kinds of clinical encounter: those around methadone maintenance treatment, and those around hormone replacement therapy. In these contrasting but related cases, we argue, clients/patients struggle to perform the kinds of rationality figured in contemporary biomedical discourses. The historical freight of non-rationality attached to the medical conditions being treated, namely ‘addiction’ and the menopause, means that clients/patients are enacted as intrinsically non-rational, which renders suspect their capacity to make the kinds of reasoned decisions that contemporary patients are expected to make. Engaging with the work of cultural studies theorist, Eve Sedgwick, we suggest that such enactments can be understood as a form of habit, produced within the complex social space of the clinical encounter. It is only through taking seriously the habits of rationality and non-rationality in which particular kinds of patients are enacted that we can begin to understand the inevitable limitations of the rationalist model of clinical encounter presented as ‘ideal’ in contemporary health discourses.

KW - Clinical encounter

KW - pharmaceuticals

KW - methadone

KW - rationality

U2 - 10.1080/09505430902885524

DO - 10.1080/09505430902885524

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 165

EP - 181

JO - Science as Culture

JF - Science as Culture

SN - 1470-1189

IS - 2

ER -