Abstract
Objective:
To determine whether English literature contains depictions of medicalisation by non-medical people.
Method:
English literature was examined by us and skilled readers.
Results:
We identified four examples: two from Macbeth and two from Vanity Fair. Not only were non-medical people the instigators, but in each publication there is one example of the advice of a medical professional (whom denied the existence of a medical problem) opinion being rejected.
Conclusions:
Evidence from the work of respected authors indicates that medicalisation was practiced long before it was described in the 1970s, that it may be instigated by non-medical people, and that it may continue after medical professionals deny the existence of medical problems.
Keywords
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