Global Health Care-seeking Discourses Facing Local Clinical Realities: Exploring the Case of Cancer

Rikke Sand Andersen, Marie Louise Tørring, Peter Vedsted

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Using cancer as an example and drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's concepts of field and on prolonged fieldwork in Danish general medical practice settings, we examine how discourses about what counts as legitimate help-seeking practices are negotiated in local clinical encounters. Overall, we identify competition between two discourses on help-seeking practices. This competition is present most when people seek help with unspecific, vague, or diffuse illness complaints, voicing uncertainty as to what counts as signs of illness, characteristic of proactive discourses emanating from global, scientific biomedicine. Such indistinct help-seeking conflicts with the dominant discourse in the local clinical setting and is characterized by an overt focus on identification of the chief complaint. The analysis illustrates how competing discourses may result in conflicting expectations to the clinical encounter and prove counterproductive to ensuring early diagnosis of cancer.

Original languageEnglish
JournalMedical Anthropology Quarterly
Volume29
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)237-255
ISSN0745-5194
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Health care system
  • Health care-seeking
  • Patient delay
  • Denmark/epidemiology
  • Global Health
  • Humans
  • General Practice
  • Female
  • Male
  • Anthropology, Medical
  • Patient Acceptance of Health Care/ethnology
  • Skin Neoplasms/diagnosis

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