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  1. When psychiatric diagnosis becomes an overworked tool.George Szmukler - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (8):517-520.
    A psychiatric diagnosis today is asked to serve many functions—clinical, research, medicolegal, delimiting insurance coverage, service planning, defining eligibility for state benefits , as well as providing rallying points for pressure groups and charities. These contexts require different notions of diagnosis to tackle the particular problem such a designation is meant to solve. In a number of instances, a ‘status’ definition is employed to tackle what is more appropriately seen as requiring a ‘functional’ approach . In these instances, a diagnosis (...)
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  • Historical ontology.Ian Hacking - 2002 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    The focus of this volume, which collects both recent and now-classic essays, is the historical emergence of concepts and objects, through new uses of words and ...
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  • Psychiatric diagnosis: the indispensability of ambivalence.Felicity Callard - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (8):526-530.
    The author analyses how debate over the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders has tended to privilege certain conceptions of psychiatric diagnosis over others, as well as to polarise positions regarding psychiatric diagnosis. The article aims to muddy the black and white tenor of many discussions regarding psychiatric diagnosis by moving away from the preoccupation with diagnosis as classification and refocusing attention on diagnosis as a temporally and spatially complex, as well as highly mediated process. (...)
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  • Book review: Understanding Autism: Parents, Doctors, and the History of a Disorder. [REVIEW]Matthew Smith - 2012 - History of the Human Sciences 25 (3):154-159.
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  • From 'Implications' to 'Dimensions': Science, Medicine and Ethics in Society. [REVIEW]Martyn D. Pickersgill - 2013 - Health Care Analysis 21 (1):31-42.
    Much bioethical scholarship is concerned with the social, legal and philosophical implications of new and emerging science and medicine, as well as with the processes of research that under-gird these innovations. Science and technology studies (STS), and the related and interpenetrating disciplines of anthropology and sociology, have also explored what novel technoscience might imply for society, and how the social is constitutive of scientific knowledge and technological artefacts. More recently, social scientists have interrogated the emergence of ethical issues: they have (...)
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  • Book review: Depression in Japan: Psychiatric Cures for a Society in Distress. [REVIEW]Katherine Angel - 2013 - History of the Human Sciences 26 (5):166-170.
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