The Marginality of Complementary and Alternative Medicine and the Prospects of Integrated Healthcare: The Influence of Knowledge, Power and Interests I

Tuesday, 8 July 2025: 15:00-16:45
Location: FSE030 (Faculty of Education Sciences (FSE))
RC15 Sociology of Health (host committee)

Language: English

What is typically referred to as ‘complementary and alternative medicine’ (CAM) is becoming increasingly popular across the globe, including in the form of traditional indigenous medicine as supported by the World Health Organization. However, although there are some notable exceptions, its exponents are often marginalised by the state through punitive exclusionary measures compared to biomedical practices. As such, CAM is frequently subject to anything from voluntary rather than statutory regulation to more oppressive systems of heretical control – with all the consequences for the standing of its practitioners and access by clients. This regular session asks whether this is because of its arguably weaker, less scientific and often incommensurable knowledge base compared to that of orthodox biomedicine or more invidious factors such as the exercise of medical power and interests. This raises the question as to whether integrated healthcare will ever be truly possible in terms of the interplay of practitioners and their organisations on both the unorthodox and orthodox sides of the divide. Papers in this session are welcome addressing these issues from a historical and/or contemporary perspective – as well as examining how far the integration of such therapies may be facilitated to public benefit in future by policy change, further research and greater rapprochement between the parties concerned. Papers should be centred on a single society or clusters of societies and focused specifically or generically in terms of the therapeutic approaches considered.
Session Organizers:
Joana ALMEIDA, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom, Nelson FILICE BARROS, University of Campinas, Brazil and Michael SAKS, University of Suffolk, United Kingdom
Chair:
Nelson FILICE BARROS, University of Campinas, Brazil
Oral Presentations
Acupuncture for Endometriosis: A Content Analysis of Biomedical Discourse
Elizabeth CAMERON, Dalhousie University, Canada
Experiences and Attitudes of Women and Maternity Care Professionals Towards the Use of Traditional, Complementary, and Alternative Medicines and Therapies during and after Pregnancy: A Qualitative Evidence Synthesis
Joana ALMEIDA, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom; Shuby PUTHUSSERY, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom; Chika ANYIGOR, School of Society, Community and Health, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom; Bar-Ika VITE, School of Applied Social Sciences, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom; Pei-Ching TSENG, Maternal and Child Health Research Centre, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom
Distributed Papers
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