Does the language we use really matter? A public NHS document includes the following:
'PHARMACY
2.1
Background
Health and Wellbeing Boards (HWBs) in England hold statutory responsibility to publish and keep up to date a statement of the needs for pharmaceutical services of the population in its area, referred to as a pharmaceutical needs assessment (PNA). PNAs are used by the NHS to make decisions on which NHS funded services need to be provided by local community pharmacies.'
I'm not asking, or demanding, change to this but the words we employ do matter. One of them above matters greatly. The question of
responsibility and its attribution. In the response to mental illness, responsibility has always been played out on the public stage. Even when society's response was to leave 'care' to religious and charitable agencies. Then the state stepped in with the first legislation. The state assumed responsibility as per the
previous post. Not only where the keys thrown away, but many people admitted there, did not need be. The 'reason for referral' was more accurately described as a
social ill. In this way, individuals were incarcerated and forgotten.
It is in the gift of Hodges' model, care of its vertical axis [INDIVIDUAL - GROUP], to be able to negotiate the contextual switch from personal to group and population. There is a marked contrast from self-medication, a nurse doing a medicines round - to the design, testing and research effort of production of a specific drug or intervention. The focus then is obviously at the population scale. The pharmocological business, is not just a business. It is a pharmaco-industrial complex, e.g.
Grouse L. Cost-effective medicine vs. the medical-industrial complex. J Thorac Dis. 2014 Sep;6(9):E203-6. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2072-1439.2014.09.01. PMID: 25276402; PMCID: PMC4178073.
When we think of dependence it is often framed at the individual level. But how can we expect to change health services, health systems to see them as they truly are: Illness and Infirmity Boards masquerading as Health and Wellbeing Boards?
individual
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INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
humanistic ------------------------------- mechanistic
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
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group
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| drugs manufactoring testing
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Sybil Shainwald (April 27, 1928 – April 9, 2025)
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Sybil Shainwald