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'''Healthism''', sometimes called '''public-healthism''', is a [[neologism]] to describe those practices, behaviors and techniques aimed at preserving health and optimizing wellbeing. This notion, which was coined in the 1970s within social sciences as a critical tool of the new ideology of health, has been gained wide public currency to refer to a wide set of processes, such like healthy food behaviors, avoiding alcohol, smoking or other risky habits, [[fitness culture]] and physical activities ([[jogging]], [[yoga]]...), taking dietary supplements, using self-tracking devices for monitoring one’s health and conducts, and so forth. It is often used with a pejorative connotation to criticize the imperative of health promotion and it is common, for exemple, in the [[Fat acceptance movement|fat acceptance mouvement]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://healthateverysizeblog.org/2013/11/19/the-haes-files-speculations-on-healthism-privilege/|title=Speculations on Healthism & Privilege|last=Ferguson|first=Fall|date=November 19, 2013|website=Health at every size|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 31, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=fatheffalump.wordpress.com/2013/05/23/fat-stigma-healthism-and-eating-disorders|title=Fat Stigma, healthism and eating disorders|last=Fat Heffalump|first=|date=May 23, 2013|website=Fat Heffalump: Living with Fattitude|archive-url=fatheffalump.wordpress.com/2013/05/23/fat-stigma-healthism-and-eating-disorders|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 31, 2018}}</ref>. Use of the word has changed and in some cases even reversed the original meaning. Certain websites promoting healthy lifestyles use the term with a positive connotation. Yet, this concept is still useful and is able to shed light on the current developments of health culture beyond medical settings<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Turrini|first=Mauro|date=2015|title=A genealogy of “healthism”: Healthy subjectivities between individual autonomy and disciplinary control|url=https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01350627|journal=Eä|volume=7|pages=11-27|via=}}</ref>.
'''Healthism''', sometimes called '''public-healthism''', is a [[neologism]] to describe those practices, behaviors and techniques aimed at preserving health and optimizing wellbeing. This notion was coined in the 1970s within social sciences as a critical tool of the new ideology of health and has been gained wide public currency to refer to a wide set of processes, such like healthy food behaviors, avoiding alcohol, smoking or other risky habits, [[fitness culture]] and physical activities ([[jogging]], [[yoga]]...), taking dietary supplements, using self-tracking devices for monitoring one’s health and conducts, and so forth. It is often used with a pejorative connotation to criticize the imperative of health promotion and it is common, for example, in the [[Fat acceptance movement|fat acceptance mouvement]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://healthateverysizeblog.org/2013/11/19/the-haes-files-speculations-on-healthism-privilege/|title=Speculations on Healthism & Privilege|last=Ferguson|first=Fall|date=November 19, 2013|website=Health at every size|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 31, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=fatheffalump.wordpress.com/2013/05/23/fat-stigma-healthism-and-eating-disorders|title=Fat Stigma, healthism and eating disorders|last=Fat Heffalump|first=|date=May 23, 2013|website=Fat Heffalump: Living with Fattitude|archive-url=fatheffalump.wordpress.com/2013/05/23/fat-stigma-healthism-and-eating-disorders|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 31, 2018}}</ref>. Use of the word has changed and in some cases even reversed the original meaning, and certain websites promoting healthy lifestyles use the term with a positive connotation. This concept also proves to a useful conceptual tool to grasp the current developments of health culture beyond medical settings<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Turrini|first=Mauro|date=2015|title=A genealogy of “healthism”: Healthy subjectivities between individual autonomy and disciplinary control|url=https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01350627|journal=Eä|volume=7|pages=11-27|via=}}</ref>, especially in cultures of fitness and sport<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Hervik|first=Stein Egil|last2=Fasting|first2=Kari|date=2014|title='It is passable, I suppose'. Adult Norwegian men's notions of their own bodies|url=|journal=International Review for the Sociology of Sport|volume=18(7)|pages=800-816|via=}}</ref>, body representations<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Rysst|first=Mari|date=|title="Healthism" and looking good: Body ideals and body practices in Norway|url=|journal=Scandinavian Journal of Public Health|volume=38(5S)|pages=71-80|via=}}</ref>, and beyond doctor/patient relationship<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Cheek|first=Julianne|date=2008|title=Healthism: a new conservatism?|url=|journal=Qualitative health research|volume=18(7)|pages=974-982|via=}}</ref>.


== Healthism and medicalization ==
== Healthism and medicalization ==

Revision as of 13:36, 7 February 2018

Healthism, sometimes called public-healthism, is a neologism to describe those practices, behaviors and techniques aimed at preserving health and optimizing wellbeing. This notion was coined in the 1970s within social sciences as a critical tool of the new ideology of health and has been gained wide public currency to refer to a wide set of processes, such like healthy food behaviors, avoiding alcohol, smoking or other risky habits, fitness culture and physical activities (jogging, yoga...), taking dietary supplements, using self-tracking devices for monitoring one’s health and conducts, and so forth. It is often used with a pejorative connotation to criticize the imperative of health promotion and it is common, for example, in the fat acceptance mouvement[1][2]. Use of the word has changed and in some cases even reversed the original meaning, and certain websites promoting healthy lifestyles use the term with a positive connotation. This concept also proves to a useful conceptual tool to grasp the current developments of health culture beyond medical settings[3], especially in cultures of fitness and sport[4], body representations[5], and beyond doctor/patient relationship[6].

Healthism and medicalization

The concept of healthism is very close to that of medicalization. Not by chance, it was most likely first used by Irving Kenneth Zola, an activist and sociologist of medicine known for his work on medicalization and disability rights. In a chapter published in 1977, Zola uses this concept to refer to the ideological component of medicalization, in particular to the alarming cultural implications of the innovations of those days[7]. According to him, the increasing capacity of medical science to redefine the borders between life and death would trigger a depoliticization of deviance and struggle, and the emergence of new forms of stigmatisation.

Three years later, Robert Crawford elaborates this concept and defines it as “the preoccupation of health as a primary – often the primary - focus for the definition and the achievement of well-being, a goals which is to be attained through the modifications of life styles, with or without therapeutic help”[8]. Like Zola, Crawford uses healthism as a critical tool to condemn the ideological aspects of the movement of medical propagation. Yet, differently from him, his polemical target are not the cutting-edge technoscientific innovations of that period, but the new blossoming health cultures of self-help and holistic medicines. These mouvements intended to replace the medical objectification of the patient with a more democratic healthcare model. According to Crawford, these movements paradoxically did not challenge the power of medical profession, but rather disseminated the medical perception ad ideology (the "clinical gaze”, to put it in Foucault’s terms[9]) to laypeople.

Healthy lifestyles and subjectivities

Nowadays, lifestyles are understood as a crucial feature of contemporary societies and a means of self-expression of individuals connected to specific people’s behaviours, consumption patterns, clothing styles, body practices and so forth[10].

In The Death of Human Medicine and the Rise of Coercive Healthism[11], Peter Skrabanek claims that "healthism" either leads to, or is a symptom of, incipient totalitarianism. Skrabanek claims that healthism justifies racism, segregation, and eugenic control; for the healthist, what is "healthy" is moral, patriotic, and pure; while what is "unhealthy" is foreign, polluted, and impure. The doctrine of "lifestylism" suggests that state actions to prescribe what is healthy or forbid what is unhealthy are limitless in scope, and offer no grounds for privacy.

The tension between challenge and approval, expressiveness and homologation pervades many current processes at the intersection of healthy lifestyles, representations and practices of the body[12], and production and use of data for self-tracking, self-monitoring or self-diagnosis.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ferguson, Fall (November 19, 2013). "Speculations on Healthism & Privilege". Health at every size. Retrieved January 31, 2018. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  2. ^ Fat Heffalump (May 23, 2013). [fatheffalump.wordpress.com/2013/05/23/fat-stigma-healthism-and-eating-disorders "Fat Stigma, healthism and eating disorders"]. Fat Heffalump: Living with Fattitude. Retrieved January 31, 2018. {{cite web}}: Check |archive-url= value (help); Check |url= value (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  3. ^ Turrini, Mauro (2015). "A genealogy of "healthism": Healthy subjectivities between individual autonomy and disciplinary control". . 7: 11–27.
  4. ^ Hervik, Stein Egil; Fasting, Kari (2014). "'It is passable, I suppose'. Adult Norwegian men's notions of their own bodies". International Review for the Sociology of Sport. 18(7): 800–816.
  5. ^ Rysst, Mari. ""Healthism" and looking good: Body ideals and body practices in Norway". Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. 38(5S): 71–80.
  6. ^ Cheek, Julianne (2008). "Healthism: a new conservatism?". Qualitative health research. 18(7): 974–982.
  7. ^ Zola, I.K. (1977). Healthism and Disabling Medicalization. In Illich, I., Zola, I.K., McKnight, J., Caplan, J. & Shaiken, H. (eds.), Disabling Professions (pp. 41–67). London-NY: Marion Boyars.
  8. ^ Crawford, Robert (1980). "Healthism and the Medicalization of Everyday Life". International Journal of Health Services. 7(4): 365–388. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |lay-source= ignored (help)
  9. ^ Foucault, Michel (1973). The birth of the Clinics: An Archaeology of Medical Perception. London: Tavistock.
  10. ^ Featherstone, Mike (1987). "Lifestyle and Consumer Culture". Theory, Culture and Society. 4(1): 55–70.
  11. ^ Skrabranek, Petr (1994). The Death of Human Medicine and the Rise of Coercive Healthism. Suffolk (UK): Social Affairs Unit.
  12. ^ Rysst, Mari (2010). "Healthism and looking good: Body ideals and body practices in Norway". Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. 38(5S): 71–80.