5.5.
Conclusions
Evaluating criticisms of medicalization poses a difficulty because the empirical data
needed to evaluate the empirical aspects of ethical arguments is often missing or
murky. Both medicalization’s critics as well as supporters make empirically
unsubstantiated claims and over-generalisations (see: Volkow and Li [2004] for
often cited claims of the benefits of medicalization, some of which some go far
beyond what is empirically justified). Moreover, the wider societal effects that
worry many sociological critics are often difficult to evaluate with rigour.
The aim of this chapter was to question the implicit and often negative normative
attitudes towards medicalization; to introduce the descriptive concept of
medicalization as a process that, pending a moral case-by-case assessment, should
be seen as normatively neutral; explore some common worries about the process of
medicalization and to disentangle the various normally intermingled threads
running through the arguments. I have proposed that the process of medicalization
in its current incarnation is wider than that of increasing medical practitioners’
power, and happens in the context of scientific and technological developments –
and increasingly within a market economy. The view of problems as ‘medical’ is
not restricted to the medical profession, but can be understood as a framework used
by medical practitioners, scientists, policy makers and the members of society at
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large. The construction of problems as medical makes some approaches to dealing
with them more likely than others and comes with benefits and perils.
The current developments in the neuroscience of morality and the proposals of MB
via direct emotion modulation stem from a scientific approach to morality which
merges easily with the medical approach to problems. The prospect of, and
proposals to pharmacologically modulate romantic and parental love and
attachment, pro-sociality, the underpinnings of moral judgement and behaviour
with oxytocin or serotonin, together with the medical diagnoses and assessment
tools for conditions such as psychopathy, social anxiety and post-partum
depression, paint a picture of an increased pace in the medicalization of sociality
and morality. It is important that we attend both to the promise and the limitations
of the medical-scientific view of the social and moral aspects of our lives, giving
due weight, however, to both the advantages and disadvantages of medicalization,
and attending to the way societal values shape the exact results of this process.
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