Abstract
Dementia studies are currently dominated by biomedical and
psychological models that focus on the individual without regard to
their socio-cultural context (Bond 1992, 1999; Lyman 1989; Harding
and Palfry 1997; Whitehouse et al. 2000). There is now a growing
interest in how socio-cultural factors may mediate the experience of,
and response to, dementia (Holstein 1998). The purpose of this review
is to examine this growing interest in the socio-cultural context of
dementia with reference to earlier developments in disability studies
(Oliver 1990; Thomas 1999) and ageing research in general (Estes et al.
1984). The implications of placing dementia in a socio-cultural context
for research, policy and practice will be discussed.Most of the theoretical work on dementia has been devoted to
pointing out the inadequacies of biomedical and psychological models
in which problems are attributed solely to an individual's neuropathology
with a simultaneous neglect of socio-cultural factors (Binney
and Swan 1991; Lyman 1989; Harding and Palfry 1998; Kitwood
1998). The study of dementia, it is argued, has been limited by the
broader ‘biomedicalisation of ageing’ whereby problems of ageing
have been attributed to the ‘tragedy’ of the individual's pathology
rather than as a function of an inadequate societal response. Robertson
(1991) describes how people so labelled are referred to as ‘victims’ or
‘sufferers’. All difficulties in the person's life are attributed to their
underlying disease with a consequent neglect of social and environmental
factors that may ameliorate or prevent such ‘symptoms’.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Social Psychology,Health(social science)
Cited by
76 articles.
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