Skip to main content

PACEs in Medical Schools

Control in Healthcare: History and Reclamation of Bodily Autonomy (nonprofitquarterly.org)

 

This is the introduction and first installment of a five-part series, Reclaiming Control: The History and Future of Choice in Our Health, examining how healthcare in the US has been built on the principle of imposing control over body, mind, and expression. However, that legacy stands alongside another: that of organizers, healers, and care workers reclaiming control over health at both the individual and systems levels. Published in five monthly installments from July to November 2022, this series aims to spark imagination amongst NPQ‘s readers and practitioners by speaking to both histories, combining research with examples of health liberation efforts.



As a public health practitioner and researcher, I have spent my career working both inside healthcare systems and with community-based organizations, fighting to hold healthcare institutions to transparency and different ways of work. Throughout those 16 years, I have heard many harrowing experiences—denial of care, lack of informed consent, explicit racism and xenophobia, medical bankruptcy—echoed across movement spaces and repeated in the narratives of women and gender nonconforming folks of color across the country. Despite inhabiting our own bodies every day, when we seek to make choices around counsel and care, we are frequently questioned, misdiagnosed, condescended to, harmed, or even left to die.

Unfortunately, this present-day reality is just the latest manifestation of a longstanding legacy of control that is fundamental to the design and delivery of healthcare in the United States. This system surrounds even individual clinicians, care workers, and healers who seek to look after us with heartfelt compassion and skill (and who, especially in the past 2.5 years, have done so at risk to themselves). It has been shaped by complex layers of history: racialized capitalism’s reduction of human bodies to commodified objects; patriarchy and religion working lockstep to dehumanize women and rigidify gender roles; and the weighting of professional over lived experiences. Each of these forces shapes our reality of and debates about what it means to control our own voices, minds, and bodies—and, in turn, to have control over our very being.

The Body as Object: Intersecting Histories of Oppression

In The Birth of the Clinic, which traces the rise of the medical gaze and the detached clinification of the body in the late 18th century, Michel Foucault shares French doctor and politician Francois Lanthenas’ reflection on the relationship between liberty and health. “Man will be totally and definitely cured only if he is first liberated…if medicine could be politically more effective, it would no longer be indispensable medically. And in a society that was free at last, in which inequalities were reduced…there would no longer be any need for academies and hospitals.”

In 2022, of course, we are nowhere near this idyllic scenario of widespread liberation, although there is a long legacy of organizing and movement building that has pulled us ever toward it. Poverty, structural racism, and other forms of systemic oppression are root causes of health inequities, therefore—as Foucault points out—a healthcare system designed primarily to treat illness—as opposed to the social causes of illness— could only ever serve as a band-aid. Indeed, by prioritizing the “medical gaze,” which turns people into objects of study, healthcare itself perpetuates those same oppressions.

To read more of Sonia Sarkar's article, please click here.

Add Comment

Comments (1)

Newest · Oldest · Popular

This passionate, insightful essay stirs powerful emotions of agreement from deep within the House of Medicine. I spent 40 years practicing family medicine fully aware of this history and these considerations. It was only after I retired and learned what "trauma informed care" meant that I learned that was what I had been doing all along. My personal dedication, in opposition to the system I found myself in, was to care for whoever came through the door and respect every patient equally. In fact, during my career I founded 2 "free" (in both monetary and existential senses) clinics and practiced many years both without malpractice insurance and with no more than subsistence pay.

The sciences of healing encompass great wisdom and almost universally all cultures give healers great respect and status. It takes the perversity of the United States to reach the anthropological peak of this process by "reduction of human bodies to commodified objects" with the medical arts mobilized for profit not care. This perversion has gone on so long and extended so far that the Dobbs decision was inevitable. Now the State has exerted formidable control over the bodies of half of its citizens in the name of "the rule of law." In fact, while Ms. Sarkar's essay dwells on the well documented historical repression and exploitation of  "minority bodies" which continues, of course, until today, it was just the preparation for the macho, capitalist, pseudo-religious, fascist seizure of control of all women's bodies.

I would be remiss if I did not observe that one side effect of this exploitation and  domination dynamic is the broad denial of scientific knowledge and distrust of good medical advice so that among the advanced countries in the world, the United States coped most poorly with the COVID pandemic. Thus sadly we live on knowing have over 1,000,000 dead Americans and a future where 160 million of us are legally violated and oppressed.

TIME TO RISE UP!

Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×