Notes from the field

Every day in my work as a resident physician, I deny my patients’ particular wishes about living and dying. It is not that I desire to be inhumane; rather, on a daily basis in my job, I am tasked with caring for patients who have been clinically marked with the diagnosis ‘failure to thrive’, in some...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kim Sue
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2020-11-01
Series:Medicine Anthropology Theory
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4706
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author Kim Sue
author_facet Kim Sue
author_sort Kim Sue
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description Every day in my work as a resident physician, I deny my patients’ particular wishes about living and dying. It is not that I desire to be inhumane; rather, on a daily basis in my job, I am tasked with caring for patients who have been clinically marked with the diagnosis ‘failure to thrive’, in some way deeming them as unsafe to live out in the world. In this think piece, I trace the evolution of this term and what its growing use might mean. As a medical anthropologist, I feel deeply conflicted about these situations that physicians encounter routinely. And as I probed this internal conflict, I realized that the clinical diagnosis of ‘failure to thrive’ is actually an attempt by physicians to grapple with how the social world becomes embodied within our aging or chronically ill populations. Caring for these patients is a complicated, consuming task that also must be further illuminated in relation to the failures of self-care among trainees and practitioners of medicine. I consider here how anthropological theories of care and well-being of both patients and providers can illuminate this ongoing phenomenon of ‘failure to thrive’ among patients who are increasingly at the social margins.
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spelling doaj.art-b0e43c3daf584b48b433f323179008622022-12-21T18:49:49ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryMedicine Anthropology Theory2405-691X2020-11-013310.17157/mat.3.3.4074706Notes from the fieldKim SueEvery day in my work as a resident physician, I deny my patients’ particular wishes about living and dying. It is not that I desire to be inhumane; rather, on a daily basis in my job, I am tasked with caring for patients who have been clinically marked with the diagnosis ‘failure to thrive’, in some way deeming them as unsafe to live out in the world. In this think piece, I trace the evolution of this term and what its growing use might mean. As a medical anthropologist, I feel deeply conflicted about these situations that physicians encounter routinely. And as I probed this internal conflict, I realized that the clinical diagnosis of ‘failure to thrive’ is actually an attempt by physicians to grapple with how the social world becomes embodied within our aging or chronically ill populations. Caring for these patients is a complicated, consuming task that also must be further illuminated in relation to the failures of self-care among trainees and practitioners of medicine. I consider here how anthropological theories of care and well-being of both patients and providers can illuminate this ongoing phenomenon of ‘failure to thrive’ among patients who are increasingly at the social margins.http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4706social sufferingcarevulnerabilitydeath
spellingShingle Kim Sue
Notes from the field
Medicine Anthropology Theory
social suffering
care
vulnerability
death
title Notes from the field
title_full Notes from the field
title_fullStr Notes from the field
title_full_unstemmed Notes from the field
title_short Notes from the field
title_sort notes from the field
topic social suffering
care
vulnerability
death
url http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4706
work_keys_str_mv AT kimsue notesfromthefield