1st Edition

The Medicalization of Cyberspace

By Andy Miah, Emma Rich Copyright 2008
176 Pages
by Routledge

176 Pages
by Routledge

176 Pages
by Routledge

The entire infrastructure and culture of medicine is being transformed by digital technology, the Internet and mobile devices. Cyberspace is now regularly used to provide medical advice and medication, with great numbers of sufferers immersing themselves within virtual communities. What are the implications of this medicalization of cyberspace for how people make sense of health and identity?... Read more

Introduction: Medicine in Society  Section 1: Cybermedical Discourse  1. Medicalization in Cyberspace  2. Cybermedical Bodies  3. Cybermedicine and Reliability Discourse  4. Virtual Governance of Health Behaviour  5. Cyberpatients, Illness Narratives and Medicalization  Section 2: Cyber Bodies  6. Partial Prostitution  7. Biological Property Rights in Cyberspace  8. The Online Pro-Ana Movement  9. The Bioethics of Cybermedicalization.  Conclusion: After-Cyborgs or Artificial Life

 

Biography

Andy Miah, Emma Rich

'Andy Miah and Emma Rich have extracted from cyberspace fascinating narratives about topics such as the persistent sexual arousal syndrome, the Visible Human Project, the controversy about an online auction for a human kidney (which never actually happened), suicide anorexia nervosa (Pro-Ana) movement...[They] seek to listen to what is going on in cyberspace and to understand how it affects the way that people see health and disease.' - New England Journal of Medicine

'The Medicalization of Cyberspace is a compellling and comprehensive consideration of how the internet and web are impacting medical practice, communication between experts and patients, the construction of the posthuman body, and many other pressing issues. Highly recommended for anyone interested in how the digital cultures of cyberspace are shaping the practice, understanding, and consumption of medicine in the contemporary period.' - N. Katherine Hayles, University of California, Los Angeles, USA

'The Medicalization of Cyberspace makes a valid and very necessary contribution to the conversation concerning cyberspace, medicalization and the body. Its value is found in the fact that rather than duplicating arguments already advanced on the positives and negatives of medical information being presented on the web or the horrors which stalk online discussion forms, it digs to the deeper issues of why cyberspace is altering the interaction between medicalization, health and body - a question which is often overlooked.' - Matt James, BioCentre BioNews