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  1. Toward Fair and Humane Pain Policy.Daniel S. Goldberg - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (4):33-36.
    Pain policy is not drug policy. If society wants to improve the lives of people in pain and compress the terrible inequalities in its diagnosis and treatment, we have to tailor policy to the root causes driving our problems in treating pain humanely and equitably. In the United States, we do not. Instead, we have proceeded to conflate drug policy with pain policy, relying on arguably magical thinking for the conclusion that by addressing the drug overdose crisis, we are simultaneously (...)
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  • Doubt & Social Policy: The Long History of Malingering in Modern Welfare States.Daniel S. Goldberg - 2021 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 49 (3):385-393.
    This essay explores the long Western history of anxieties about feigned illness connected specifically to social policy. There is a remarkable consistency of such anxieties across time, as they appear in almost every major historical period in the West since the Middle Ages.
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  • Punch-Drunk Slugnuts: Violence and the Vernacular History of Disease.Stephen T. Casper - 2022 - Isis 113 (2):266-288.
    The observation that neurological illnesses follow recurrent hits to the head was tempered by the terms that first called the diseases into scientific existence: “punch-drunk,” “slugnutty,” “slaphappy,” “goofy,” “punchy,” and a host of other colloquialisms accompanying class identities. Thus the discovery of disease and its medicalization ran straight into a countervailing belief about losers—losers in boxing, losers in life, losers in general. To medicalize such individuals was to fly in the face of a culture that made them jokes. Yet a (...)
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  • Language of Incarceration and of Persons Subject to Incarceration.Lynette Reid - 2022 - Public Health Ethics 15 (2):191-193.
    Reflecting on Smith (2021) in this issue, this commentary extends our consideration of issues in carceral health and questions the dehumanizing language we sometimes use—including in public health and public health ethics—to talk about persons held in incarceration. Even the language we use for the carceral system itself (such as ‘criminal justice system’) is fraught: it casts a laudatory light on the system and papers over its role in compounding racial health inequities and in sustaining colonialism. A host of issues (...)
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  • Defining Misprescribing to Inform Prescription Opioid Policy.Kelly K. Dineen - 2018 - Hastings Center Report 48 (4):5-6.
    Prescription opioid policies too often reflect over a century's worth of moralizing about the nature of opioid use disorder, the value of pain, and the meaning of suffering. The social and legal penalties to prescribers run in one direction—avoid overprescribing, however defined, at all costs. The lack of shared definitions is problematic for formulating and evaluating opioid policy. For example, the variant definitions of “misuse,” “abuse,” and “addiction” complicate estimates of morbidity. There are also no widely accepted definitions of misprescribing (...)
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