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Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 2006;60:561
Copyright © 2006 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.

SPEAKER'S CORNER

The health society: the need for a theory

Ilona Kickbusch

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Professor Ilona Kickbusch
Tiefental Postfach 434 Brienz BE, Switzerland, CH3855; kickbusch@bluewin.ch

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

While many public health experts maintain that theory is not particularly important to their business they of course usually have one, implicit as it may be. Or at least they have an ideology. When I started to become involved in public health the leading theoretical framework was by Michel Foucault.1 He showed how society was subject to a process of medicalisation and described the extent to which the medical eye exerted ever more control over matters of everyday life. Much of the critical debate around health promotion and lifestyles reflects this approach.

But as we look around us we see an inflation of health and wellness that does not quite fit this model—in particular because much of the driving force now comes from the market. At a time when the medical profession still criticises the World Health Organisation’s definition of health as utopian the wellness revolution has set in. At . . . [Full text of this article]


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