• Title of article

    Diagnosing moral disorder: the discovery and evolution of fetal alcohol syndrome

  • Author/Authors

    Elizabeth M. Armstrong، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    2025
  • To page
    2042
  • Abstract
    The diagnosis of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) was invented in 1973. This paper investigates the process by which a cluster of birth defects associated with exposure to alcohol in utero came to be a distinct medical diagnosis, focusing on the first ten years of the medical literature on FAS. Fetal alcohol syndrome was “discovered” by a group of American dysmorphologists who published the first case reports and coined the term FAS. However, the nature of the diagnosis and its salient symptoms were determined collectively over time by the medical profession as a whole. The paper traces the natural history of the diagnosis in the U.S. through five stages: introduction, confirmation and corroboration, dissent, expansion, and diffusion. FAS serves as an example of the social construction of clinical diagnosis; moral entrepreneurship plays a key role and the medical literature on FAS is infused with moral rhetoric, including passages from classical mythology, philosophy, and the Bible. FAS is a moral as well as a medical diagnosis, reflecting the broader cultural concerns of the era in which it was discovered, including a greater awareness of environmental threats to health, the development of fetal medicine, an emphasis on “the perfect child,” and a growing paradigm of maternal–fetal conflict.
  • Keywords
    moral entrepreneurship , diagnosis , fetal alcohol syndrome
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    599954