Embodying illness, embodying cancer. Culture, medicine and psychiatry [Cult Med Psychiatry] Journal article | | Title | Embodying illness, embodying cancer. | | Author(s) | Gordon DR | | Institution | Center for the Study and Prevention of Cancer, Florence, Italy. | | Source | Cult Med Psychiatry 1990 Jun; 14(2):275-97. | | MeSH | Adaptation, Psychological Attitude to Death Breast Neoplasms Cross-Cultural Comparison Cultural Characteristics Female Humans Neoplasms Physician-Patient Relations Prognosis Sick Role Truth Disclosure
| | Abstract | Individuals and societies embody illnesses in different ways, in part determined by the way a person knows and lives his or her diagnosis and prognosis. Based on research in Northern Italy, on the experiences and meanings of cancer and on the practice of nondisclosure of the diagnosis, we find nondisclosure reflects a world divided--life/death, good/bad, mind/body--with the unwanted converted to "other." The strong association of cancer with death, suffering, and hopelessness in much of Italy, coupled with the tremendous power attributed to naming and "sentencing" makes nondisclosure a major mechanism for keeping the "condemned" in this social world, and keeping death, decay, and suffering in the "other." It is the social reality that is dominant here, such that informing a patient of cancer can be tantamount to social death. | | Language | eng | | Pub Type(s) | Comparative Study Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
| | PubMed ID | 2401153 |
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