EBSCO Logo
Connecting you to content on EBSCOhost
Results
Title

The medicalisation of the dying self: The search for life extension in advanced cancer.

Authors

Mohammed, Shan; Peter, Elizabeth; Gastaldo, Denise; Howell, Doris

Abstract

Although many studies have previously examined medicalisation, we add a new dimension to the concept as we explore how contemporary oncological medicine shapes the dying self as predominantly medical. Through an analysis of multiple case studies collected within a comprehensive cancer centre in Ontario, Canada, we examine how people with late‐stage cancer and their healthcare providers enacted the process of medicalisation through engaging in the search for oncological treatments, such as experimental drug trials, despite the incurability of their disease. The seven cases included 20 interviews with patients, family, physicians and nurses, the analysis of 30 documents and 5 hr of field observation. A poststructural perspective informed our study. We propose that searching for life extension enacts medicalisation by shaping the dying person afflicted with terminal cancer into new medical subjectivities that are knowledgeable, active, entrepreneurial and curative. Participants initially took up medical thinking from the formal oncology system, but then began to apply and internalise medical rationalities to alter their personhood, thereby generating new curative possibilities for themselves. For people seeking life extension, the embodied and day‐to‐day experiences of suffering and being close to death became expressed and moderated in fundamentally medicalised terms.

Subjects

ONTARIO; ATTITUDE (Psychology); CANCER patient psychology; DISEASE complications; INTERVIEWING; LONGEVITY; RESEARCH methodology; CASE studies; NURSES' attitudes; PHYSICIAN-patient relations; QUALITY of life; RESEARCH funding; SUFFERING; TERMINALLY ill; THERAPEUTICS; TUMORS; QUALITATIVE research; JUDGMENT sampling; ATTITUDES toward death; TREATMENT effectiveness; PATIENTS' attitudes; PHYSICIANS' attitudes

Publication

Nursing Inquiry, 2020, Vol 27, Issue 1, pN.PAG

ISSN

1320-7881

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/nin.12316

EBSCO Connect | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Copyright | Manage my cookies
Journals | Subjects | Sitemap
© 2025 EBSCO Industries, Inc. All rights reserved