Back to Search
Start Over
Diagnoses in and out of time: historical and medical perspectives on the diagnoses of distress
- Source :
- Diagnosis; March 2017, Vol. 4 Issue: 1 p3-11, 9p
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Focusing on the medical approach to the subjective forms of distress, this article has a three-fold argument. First, the historical starting point of diagnosing distress was neurasthenia during the last two decades of the 19th century. Second, the diagnosis of neurasthenia that initially contained more somatic than mental symptoms was gradually replaced by the more psychologically conceptualized neuroses. Such a psychiatrization of neurosis gradually separated mental and somatic syndromes into two distinct diagnostic categories, those of mental and somatic. Third, when modern “neuroses” are seen in the framework of distress rather than disease, it provides tools for new kinds of interventions, in which the principal aim is to alleviate the subjective distress with all possible and reasonable means and methods. As the social context constitutes a crucial “etiology” to medicalized forms of distress, we need new, context-based approaches to both analyze and alleviate such distress. In our historical and medical approach to these “diagnoses of distress”, we are guided by the belief that analyzing diagnostic categories can provide important insight into the mechanisms behind our changing conceptions of health and wellbeing.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 21948011 and 2194802x
- Volume :
- 4
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- Supplemental Index
- Journal :
- Diagnosis
- Publication Type :
- Periodical
- Accession number :
- ejs41494791
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1515/dx-2016-0013