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The Perils of Medicalization for Population Health and Health Equity

Paula M. Lantz, Daniel S. Goldberg, Sarah E. Gollust

2023Milbank Quarterly37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Policy Points Medicalization is a historical process by which personal, behavioral, and social issues are increasingly viewed through a biomedical lens and "diagnosed and treated" as individual pathologies and problems by medical authorities. Medicalization in the United States has led to a conflation of "health" and "health care" and a confusion between individual social needs versus the social, political, and economic determinants of health. The essential and important work of population health science, public health practice, and health policy writ large is being thwarted by a medicalized view of health and an overemphasis on personal health services and the health care delivery system as the major focal point for addressing societal health issues and health inequality. Increased recognition of the negative consequences of a medicalized view of health is essential, with a focus on education and training of clinicians and health care managers, journalists, and policymakers.

Topics & Concepts

MedicalizationHealth policyHealth carePublic healthSocial determinants of healthHealth equityInternational healthWritHealth promotionPopulationMedicinePublic relationsPolitical scienceNursingEnvironmental healthPsychiatryLawPharmaceutical industry and healthcareGlobal Public Health Policies and EpidemiologyNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations
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