Implementation of substitution treatment in Finland: Beyond rationalisation and medicalisation
Engelsk titel: Implementation of substitution treatment in Finland: Beyond rationalization and medicalization
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Författare:
Selin, Jani
Email: jani.selin@jyu.fi
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 30
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 11043892
Sammanfattning
Aims – Finnish treatment of drug abuse has during the last two decades shifted from a predominantly
psychosocial approach to a more medical mode. This is especially evident in the rapid implementation
of substitution treatments (STs). My aim is to show that labelling this development as ‘medicalisation’
or ‘rationalisation’ as a form of medical progress will not increase our understanding of the change.
Material and design – I analysed texts from several periodicals with psychosocial, social policy and
medical perspectives between 1997 and 2005. Four basic conceptual and argumentative underpinnings
emerged which gave credence to the medical and rational approach, and the validity of these four elements
was then investigated. I also collected all the texts on drug addiction and its treatment from two medical
journals in 1965–1976 to examine the way in which drug addiction was conceptualised during this earlier
phase. Results – The material shows that there are at least four reasons why medicalisation and
rationalisation cannot explain the implementation of substitution treatments in Finland. First, progress
in medical research on addiction did not make STs necessary. Second, the effectiveness of substitution
treatments hinges on a particular kind of scientific rationality that cannot be equated with rationality per
se. Third, it was not the 1990s and 2000s that drug addiction was coded as a medical problem for the
first time. Fourth, it is difficult to include into the medicalisation theory how people actively want to be
‘medicalised’. Medical knowledge and technology open up new domains of knowledge with possible
relations to practices of power and offer people new ways of self-understanding. How these different
practices work is a question of empirical research. Both ‘rationalisation’ and ‘medicalisation’ are concepts
often used in an inflationary way, and this may make them insensitive as analytical instruments.