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Biomedicalization and the public sphere: Newspaper coverage of health and medicine, 1960s–2000s

This article examines historical trends in the reporting of health and medicine in The New York Times and Chicago Tribune from the 1960s to the 2000s. It focuses on the extent to which health reporting can be said to have become increasingly politicized, or to have shifted from treating the producti...

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Published in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2013-11, Vol.96, p.121-128
Main Authors: Hallin, Daniel C., Brandt, Marisa, Briggs, Charles L.
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Language:English
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cites cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c491t-e4ce46f7d43235e90ede1c57b352c092d12077e55a63a7d16a82a35e440701d13
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creator Hallin, Daniel C.
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description This article examines historical trends in the reporting of health and medicine in The New York Times and Chicago Tribune from the 1960s to the 2000s. It focuses on the extent to which health reporting can be said to have become increasingly politicized, or to have shifted from treating the production of medical knowledge as something belonging to a restricted, specialized sphere, to treating it as a part of the general arena of public debate. We coded a sample of 400 stories from the two newspapers for four different Implied Audiences which health stories can address: Scientific/Professional, Patient/Consumer, Investor and Citizen/Policymaker. Stories were also coded for the origin of the story, the sources cited, the presence of controversy, and the positive or negative representation of biomedical institutions and actors. The data show that through all five decades, news reporting on health and medicine addressed readers as Citizen/Policymakers most often, though Patient/Consumer and Investor-oriented stories increased over time. Biomedical researchers eclipsed individual physicians and public health officials as sources of news, and the sources diversified to include more business sources, civil society organizations and patients and other lay people. The reporting of controversy increased, and portrayals of biomedicine shifted from lopsidedly positive to more mixed. We use these data in pinpointing how media play a constitutive role in the process of “biomedicalization,” through which biomedicine has both extended its reach into and become entangled with other spheres of society and of knowledge production. •Documents historical trends in newspaper coverage of health and medicine.•Reports content analysis of newspaper health coverage over five decades.•Proposes method for coding implied audience of health stories.•Assesses the integration of health discourse into the public sphere.•Explores the role of news media in the process of biomedicalization.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.07.030
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); ScienceDirect Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Biomedical research
Biomedicalization
Biomedicine
Chicago
Citizens
Consumers
Content analysis
Health
Health care
Humans
Journalism
Journalism, Medical
Journalists
Knowledge
Mass media
Media
Media studies
Medical sciences
Medicalization
Medicine
Methodology (Data Collection)
Miscellaneous
New York
Newspapers as Topic - trends
Patients
Physicians
Politics
Press
Public health
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Public Opinion
Public sphere
U.S.A
USA
title Biomedicalization and the public sphere: Newspaper coverage of health and medicine, 1960s–2000s
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