Recursive Debility: Symptoms, Patient Activism, and the Incomplete Medicalization of ME/CFS.
This article examines the contestation of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). Lacking consistent diagnostic definitions, agreed-on biological indicators, or approved treatments, ME/CFS is an incompletely medicalized condition. It is defined by intractable and debilitating exhaustion after any form of exertion. Through an ethnographic exploration of an American ME/CFS patient activist group, I develop the concept of "recursive debility." Symptoms form the very basis for disease activist groupings in the absence of biomarkers, but they also present a significant barrier to traditional forms of activism. Ironically, then, debilitation blocks the means through which debilitation might end. Patients contest systems of knowledge but always in bodies that experience exhaustion without end. This article presents a disability studies intervention in suggesting that the recursivity of debility demonstrates the profound interdependence of the bodily aspects of impairment and the sociopolitical aspects of disability. [ME/CFS, chronic illness, medicalization, symptoms, debility].
Duke Scholars
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- United States
- Public Health
- Medicalization
- Knowledge
- Humans
- Frailty
- Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic
- Anthropology, Medical
- 4410 Sociology
- 4401 Anthropology
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- United States
- Public Health
- Medicalization
- Knowledge
- Humans
- Frailty
- Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic
- Anthropology, Medical
- 4410 Sociology
- 4401 Anthropology