Sweet Blood and Social Suffering: Rethinking Cause-Effect Relationships in Diabetes, Distress, and Duress

I draw upon anthropological engagements with bioscience and embodiment in order to unpack current approaches to defining and preventing diabetes mel-litus. The analysis stems from the conviction that carefully considering the symbolic frames through which we conceive of diseases, their origins, thei...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Melanie Rock
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.506.5006
http://www.cacis.umontreal.ca/pdf/SocialSuffering_MA.pdf
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Summary:I draw upon anthropological engagements with bioscience and embodiment in order to unpack current approaches to defining and preventing diabetes mel-litus. The analysis stems from the conviction that carefully considering the symbolic frames through which we conceive of diseases, their origins, their distribution, and their consequences will assist us in planning and imple-menting interventions to improve population health. I argue that research and interventions focused on the sweetness of blood would benefit from rethinking intersections between diabetes, distress, and duress. In many instances, the lived experience of diabetes is consonant with an understanding of distress (i.e., ‘‘social suffering’’) that expands conventional understandings of popula-tion health problems. Diabetes incidence is rising worldwide, but it is rising especially rapidly in Aboriginal and other disadvantaged populations. Notably, diabetes is now three to five times more common in Canada’s First Nations population than it is in its non-Aboriginal population. Yet as recently as 50 years ago, diabetes and associated health problems were rare in these groups. To come to grips with such transformations and disparities is to advance the population health research agenda. MELANIE ROCK is a postdoctoral researcher at the Groupe de recherche interdisciplinaire en sante ́ (GRIS), Universite ́ de Montréal. She graduated in 2002 with a Ph.D. in an-thropology from McGill University. She will join the Community Health Sciences De-partment at the University of Calgary in July 2003. Before beginning doctoral studies