The cultural hegemony of chronic disease association discourse in Canada
Autor: | Toba Bryant, Claudia Chaufan, Daniel Saliba, Morouj Bakhsh, Allan Puran, Jessica Bindra, Dennis Raphael |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Medical sociology
Health (social science) Hegemony Sociology and Political Science 030503 health policy & services Public policy Disease Cultural hegemony Criminology 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Political science Business sector 030212 general & internal medicine Complicity 0305 other medical science Social theory |
Zdroj: | Social Theory & Health. 17:172-191 |
ISSN: | 1477-822X 1477-8211 |
DOI: | 10.1057/s41285-018-0072-7 |
Popis: | In this paper, we explore how corporate domination of two major disease associations in Canada, Heart and Stroke Canada (HSC) and Diabetes Canada (DC), as manifested in membership of their boards of directors may be acting with biomedical complicity to create hegemonic discourse on the nature of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). This is problematic as the activities that derive from this discourse thwart public policy action to address the primary causes and means of managing chronic disease: Canadians’ living and working conditions. Through critical analysis of the membership of HSC and DC boards of directors, we link their corporate and biomedical backgrounds with the limiting of chronic disease association messaging to narrow discredited behavioural approaches. We also draw attention to other means by which the corporate sector is able to shape disease association discourse on the causes and means of managing chronic disease. To rectify this, we call for membership of these boards to include those knowledgeable with broader understandings of health and those most likely to suffer CVD and T2DM: the poor, excluded, and marginalised. Since we recognise these associations will not voluntarily undertake these actions, we present means to force this shift. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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