Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Cosmologies (Surveillance Medicine (Ackerkencht (1967) 3 medical…
Cosmologies
Surveillance Medicine
Ackerkencht (1967) 3 medical perspectives
Library medicine
Bedside medicine
Hospital medicine
Armstrong (1995) The Rise of Surveillance Medicine
Dissemination of Intervention
After WWII emphasis on comprehensive health care, and primary and community care which underpinned the deployment of surveillance services such as screening and health promotion
Inter-war experiments
Pearce and Crocker (!943) - Pioneer Health Centre at Peckham
1926-1950 experiment designed to see whether people would take responsibility for their own health if told what's good for them. Aimed at promoting health awareness.
Screening sometimes unwanted by px's so development of a strategy that involved giving responsibility to px's themselves
Fargo schools
Health promotion occurred over several decades in 20th century
First attempt between Fargo schools and Commonwealth Fund (1923) to teach children health education
Techniques of surveillance
Screening
Survey
Public Health
E.g. NHS (2014) 'Smoke free' from Public Health
Problematisation of the Normal
Prevision manifestations that a person/population hung precariously between health and illness - e.g. attempts to control health of prostitutes with Contagious Diseases Acts
The 'child' was the first target of the full deployment of the concept due to the experiences of growth and development which are under constant threat - justify close medical observation
Close surveillance on physical and mental well-being
Socio-medical survey during WWII - revealed the ubiquity of illness and health is a precarious state
Last (1963) Post-war fascination with the weakening person-patient interface - notion of the clinical iceberg which revealed most illness lay outside the health care provision
Mechanic and Volkart (1960) most people experience symptoms everyday yet very few are seen by Doctors
'Everyone is normal but no-one is truly health'
Consumer Choice/Reflexivity
E-Scaped Medicine
Digital Health