• Title of article

    Consumerism, reflexivity and the medical encounter

  • Author/Authors

    Deborah Lupton، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    373
  • To page
    381
  • Abstract
    Much emphasis has been placed recently in sociological, policy and popular discourses on changes in lay peopleʹs attitudes towards the medical profession that have been labelled by some as a move towards the embracing of “consumerism”. Notions of consumerism tend to assume that lay people act as “rational” actors in the context of the medical encounter. They align with broader sociological concepts of the “reflexive self” as a product of late modernity; that is, the self who acts in a calculated manner to engage in self-improvement and who is sceptical about expert knowledges. To explore the ways that people think and feel about medicine and the medical profession, this article draws on findings from a study involving in-depth interviews with 60 lay people from a wide range of backgrounds living in Sydney. These data suggest that, in their interactions with doctors and other health care workers, lay people may pursue both the ideal-type “consumerist” and the “passive patient” subject position simultaneously or variously, depending on the context. The article concludes that late modernist notions of reflexivity as applied to issues of consumerism fail to recognize the complexity and changeable nature of the desires, emotions and needs that characterize the patient-doctor relationship.
  • Keywords
    consumerism , Reflexivity , Patients , Doctors , medical care
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    1997
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    599455