Is Medical Tourism Transcultural Hypogamy?

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY Studies in History Pub Date : 2023-02-01 DOI:10.1177/02576430231184534
Harish Naraindas
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Abstract

This article attempts to make a set of interrelated arguments. It claims that the epithet ‘medical tourism’, which is of recent provenance, tacitly subscribes to a particular and narrow understanding of ‘medicine’, namely, the Anglo-American variant of biomedicine. This variant, unlike its Continental European counterpart, does not countenance the spa (Kur, Kuur, Termas, etc.) as ‘medical’ therapy, a therapy that is part of orthodox biomedicine on the continent, albeit on its fringe and one where pleasure and therapy often coexist. The Anglo-American variant leads to an exclusive focus on what may be called organ-based therapy with an emphasis on surgical and technological intervention, where uninsured and under-insured ‘middle-class’ patients travel from the White world to wog-land. This is a reversal of older forms of medical travel where rich wogs travelled from wog-land to the White world for medical treatment. The reversal results in a binary of White vampires and wog victims and is responsible, in part, for the moral tension of the oxymoron called ‘medical tourism’, with the other part of the oxymoron being constituted by the contradiction between pleasure and therapy. The vampire-victim binary in turn often mutes the mediating virtuosos— doctors, hospitals, medical travel operators, firms, companies, websites and most importantly, medical expertise and technology—in the analytical and explanatory canvas. In light of this, the article not only suggests that the epithet ‘medical tourism’ requires careful scrutiny and needs to be situated as part of a longer genealogy and larger canvas to include all kinds of transnational, transcultural and transregional medical travel, but it also makes a plea for re-examining the kind of morality play that the epithet engenders by asking, among other things, if vampires could also be victims, and what happens to this binary when the biomedical fringe (the Continental spa/Kur/Kuur/Termas) and alternative systems of medicine (e.g., Ayurveda and host of other therapies) are brought into play, or when doctors and therapists undertake travel for medical/therapeutic expertise.
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医疗旅游是跨文化的一夫多妻制吗?
这篇文章试图提出一系列相互关联的论点。它声称,最近出现的“医疗旅游”一词,默认了对“医学”的一种特定和狭隘的理解,即英美变体的生物医学。与欧洲大陆的同类不同,这种变体不支持水疗(Kur, Kuur, Termas等)作为“医学”疗法,这种疗法是欧洲大陆正统生物医学的一部分,尽管处于边缘地位,而且快乐和治疗经常并存。英美的变体导致了对所谓器官治疗的独家关注,强调手术和技术干预,没有保险和保险不足的“中产阶级”患者从白人世界来到了黑人世界。这与以前富有的狼人从狼地到白人世界治病的医疗旅行方式截然相反。这种逆转导致了白人吸血鬼和wog受害者的二元对立,并在一定程度上造成了被称为“医疗旅游”的矛盾修饰法的道德紧张,而这种矛盾修饰法的另一部分是由快乐和治疗之间的矛盾构成的。反过来,“吸血鬼-受害者”的二元关系往往会让调解大师——医生、医院、医疗旅行运营商、公司、公司、网站,最重要的是,医疗专业知识和技术——在分析和解释的画布上哑然失声。鉴于此,这篇文章不仅建议“医疗旅游”这个词需要仔细审查,需要作为一个更长的谱系和更大的背景的一部分,包括各种跨国、跨文化和跨地区的医疗旅行,而且它还呼吁重新审视这个词所产生的道德剧,其中包括问吸血鬼是否也可能是受害者,当生物医学边缘(大陆水疗/库尔/库尔/特马斯)和替代医学系统(例如,阿育吠陀和其他疗法)发挥作用时,或者当医生和治疗师为医疗/治疗专业知识而旅行时,这种二元结构会发生什么?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Studies in History reflects the considerable expansion and diversification that has occurred in historical research in India in recent years. The old preoccupation with political history has been integrated into a broader framework which places equal emphasis on social, economic and cultural history. Studies in History examines regional problems and pays attention to some of the neglected periods of India"s past. The journal also publishes articles concerning countries other than India. It provides a forum for articles on the writing of different varieties of history, and contributions challenging received wisdom on long standing issues.
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