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词汇 medicalize
释义

Definition of medicalize in English:

medicalize

(British medicalise)
verb ˈmɛdɪk(ə)lʌɪzˈmɛdəkəˌlaɪz
[with object]
  • Treat (something) as a medical problem, especially without justification.

    doctors tend to medicalize manifestations of distress, prescribing drugs such as sleeping tablets

    医生常常从医学的角度看待病痛的表现,开出安眠药片之类的药。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And what does it mean to medicalize human suffering?
    • In the 1970s, and associated with the women's health movement, feminist sociologists began to study the way that motherhood was medicalized.
    • His comments prompt questions about whether raising awareness of social anxiety disorder may in fact be medicalising shyness.
    • While once children were called stupid, lazy, naughty or obstinate, now we have many syndromes and disorders - all still imperfectly understood - that medicalise their behaviour.
    • ‘We have medicalized our white, Anglo-Saxon society to the point where it is ludicrous,’ he said.
    • There are a lot of other factors to consider and we shouldn't medicalize all human behavior.
    • They can be considered to be the most important effort to medicalise sexuality in the 20th century.
    • I do worry about the fact that we medicalise everything.
    • If we're self-medicating, who decided to medicalise these emotions in the first place?
    • By medicalising their behavior we give medicine and the state the remit to involuntarily detain and medicate such people to prevent them from behaving in ways society finds intolerable.
    • According to Illich, doctors had medicalized various aspects of life, including ageing, death, pain, patients' expectations, and healing and preventive therapies.
    • Hence the tendency to medicalise it, treat it as a health problem.
    • This is especially motivated by concerns within the psychiatric profession and the general public that mental disorders are being overdiagnosed, and ordinary human problems are being medicalized.
    • This move to pathologize and medicalize every human emotion and behavior is succeeding if one believes IMS America, which tracks the pharmaceutical companies.
    • We agree that illiteracy is not a disease that needs to be medicalized.
    • The long tradition of representing illness as a punishment for sin was continued when sexual behaviour was medicalised and transformed into morbidity.
    • This era of social reorganization and professionalization also brought the first widespread attempt to medicalize drunkenness.
    • Their conceptualization of their own suffering and their response to the resulting trauma stood in sharp contrast to the Western propensity to medicalize human suffering.
    • ‘There is a huge move towards diagnosing and medicalising these problems,’ she says.
    • However well meaning our action may be, it medicalises the child's condition: the parents may well feel that their child must have a serious problem because he or she is ‘under’ a specialist.

Derivatives

  • medicalization

  • noun mɛdɪk(ə)lʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n
    • The medicalisation of modern society has already deskilled many other professions and led patients into an unhealthy dependence on medical care.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the 21st century, medicalisation has become mainstream, even desirable.
      • Early diagnosis of the disease might unleash a process of premature medicalisation.
      • Minerva wonders why it's called a disorder at all, and whether this is another example of the medicalisation of normal human behaviour.
      • However, medicalisation of traumatic human suffering runs the risk of reducing it to a technical problem.

Definition of medicalize in US English:

medicalize

(British medicalise)
verbˈmɛdəkəˌlaɪzˈmedəkəˌlīz
[with object]
  • View (something) in medical terms; treat as a medical problem, especially unwarrantedly.

    以医学方法处理;从医学角度考虑

    doctors tend to medicalize manifestations of distress, prescribing drugs such as sleeping tablets

    医生常常从医学的角度看待病痛的表现,开出安眠药片之类的药。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘We have medicalized our white, Anglo-Saxon society to the point where it is ludicrous,’ he said.
    • While once children were called stupid, lazy, naughty or obstinate, now we have many syndromes and disorders - all still imperfectly understood - that medicalise their behaviour.
    • And what does it mean to medicalize human suffering?
    • We agree that illiteracy is not a disease that needs to be medicalized.
    • Hence the tendency to medicalise it, treat it as a health problem.
    • In the 1970s, and associated with the women's health movement, feminist sociologists began to study the way that motherhood was medicalized.
    • This is especially motivated by concerns within the psychiatric profession and the general public that mental disorders are being overdiagnosed, and ordinary human problems are being medicalized.
    • By medicalising their behavior we give medicine and the state the remit to involuntarily detain and medicate such people to prevent them from behaving in ways society finds intolerable.
    • According to Illich, doctors had medicalized various aspects of life, including ageing, death, pain, patients' expectations, and healing and preventive therapies.
    • I do worry about the fact that we medicalise everything.
    • They can be considered to be the most important effort to medicalise sexuality in the 20th century.
    • However well meaning our action may be, it medicalises the child's condition: the parents may well feel that their child must have a serious problem because he or she is ‘under’ a specialist.
    • There are a lot of other factors to consider and we shouldn't medicalize all human behavior.
    • Their conceptualization of their own suffering and their response to the resulting trauma stood in sharp contrast to the Western propensity to medicalize human suffering.
    • If we're self-medicating, who decided to medicalise these emotions in the first place?
    • This move to pathologize and medicalize every human emotion and behavior is succeeding if one believes IMS America, which tracks the pharmaceutical companies.
    • This era of social reorganization and professionalization also brought the first widespread attempt to medicalize drunkenness.
    • The long tradition of representing illness as a punishment for sin was continued when sexual behaviour was medicalised and transformed into morbidity.
    • His comments prompt questions about whether raising awareness of social anxiety disorder may in fact be medicalising shyness.
    • ‘There is a huge move towards diagnosing and medicalising these problems,’ she says.
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