Commercial pharmaceutical medicine and medicalization: A case study from El Salvador
- 1 June 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
- Vol. 5 (2) , 105-134
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00055416
Abstract
This study illustrates the impact of prepackaged pharmaceutical products, usually manufactured by multinational firms, on the health care sector of developing market economies. In many Third World countries Western biomedical practitioners do not exercise the degree of control over the use of one of their major healing resources, prescription medications, that is characteristic in most Western developed countries. Instead, these products have become integrated into healing strategies of alternative medical practitioners, giving rise to a popular sector of medical care, here termed the commercial pharmaceutical sector. In this context a form and process of medicalization has taken place which is only tangentially related to the presence of Western biomedical practitioners. A dependence has been created on a particular form of therapy, Western manufactured drug products, as well as on the agents and institutions that make the products available, that has produced cultural, social and clinical forms of commerciogenesis. These general propositions are examined in a case study of the impact of the pharmaceutical invasion of the health care sector in a Central American town. Michigan State UniversityKeywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pharmaceuticals: Their Role in Developing SocietiesScience, 1980
- The Export of Hazardous Factories to Developing NationsInternational Journal of Health Services, 1979
- Disease and Rural Development: A Sociological Analysis of Morbidity in Two Mexican VillagesInternational Journal of Health Services, 1977
- The Epidemiology of Drug PromotionInternational Journal of Health Services, 1977
- Emerging Ideologies in MedicineReview of Radical Political Economics, 1977
- Who Shall Live? Health, Economics, and Social Choice.Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 1976
- The Industrialization of Fetishism or the Fetishism of Industrialization: A Critique of Ivan IllichInternational Journal of Health Services, 1975
- THE INTERNATIONAL PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY AND LESS‐DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO INDIA*Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 1974
- The Underdevelopment of Health or the Health of Underdevelopment: An Analysis of the Distribution of Human Health Resources in Latin AmericaInternational Journal of Health Services, 1974
- The Urban Curandero1American Anthropologist, 1971