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The risk experience: the social effects of health screening and the emergence of a proto-illness. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Health screenings can have significant physical, emotional, and social impacts on individuals identified as at risk for diseases.
  • This study focuses on the social effects of being designated as at risk, particularly for people with high cholesterol and elevated PSA levels.
  • It introduces the term "proto-illness" to describe how those at risk often modify their daily lives and social interactions in ways similar to individuals with established illnesses, highlighting the overlap between experiences of risk and illness.

Article Abstract

Those who undergo health screening often experience physical and emotional effects as a result of the screening process. However, the effects of health screening go beyond these physical and mental complications, often having profound social effects for those who are screened. This study explores the social implications of health screening for people who undergo it and are designated as being at risk for potential disease. Through a qualitative analysis of the experiences of individuals with elevated cholesterol levels and men with elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels, this research offers a description of the experience of being at risk, identifying three primary components: increased medical contact, a restructuring of everyday routines and altered social relationships. Whereas the at-risk health status engendered by current clinical approaches to screening and surveillance has been characterised as proto-disease, this study develops a companion definition of proto-illness to characterise the social experience of life with an identified health risk. Those who are at risk act in ways that are similar to those who are ill. The concept of proto-illness implies that the experience of risk is parallel to the experience of illness and contributes to the sociology of medical screening by establishing a much needed bridge between the two experiences.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12257DOI Listing

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