In Spite of its successes the biomedical model has been criticised. Why? Include examples to show both the strengths and drawbacks of the biomedical approach.

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Susan M Smith

K100

 TMA 01

 Part 1

In Spite of its successes the biomedical model has been criticised. Why? Include examples to show both the strengths and drawbacks of the biomedical approach.

The biomedical model of medicine has been around for centuries as the predominate model used by doctors in the diagnosis of disease. The model focuses on the physical processes of disease and does not take into account psychological or social factors in the cause and treatment of illness. (Unit 1 page 88)

Healthcare can originate from many sources and is often promoted in the home on a daily basis with the emphasis on prevention. (Unit 1 page 76)

 However when we think about the provision and receipt of health care often the first people we think of are doctors and nurses. These individuals are widely accepted as having the medical expertise and work within the biomedical model. They apply scientific knowledge that they have gained through lengthy formal training in an attempt cure the disease or ailment. Access to health care is essentially free of charge in the United Kingdom and the majority of individuals in this country will have benefited from medical intervention by medical experts.

 In many ways this is a successful approach. The strength of the biomedical model is that it researchers the cause of each illness rather than assume

there is an identifiable explanation for the illness. It can be argued that knowledge of the origin of an illness is a way in which it can be prevented.

The biomedical model has been successful in attempting to make its knowledge superior and legitimate to other forms of medical knowledge.

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Many health problems may benefit from the biomedical model, for example childbirth which with the aid of medical knowledge can prevent the death of both mother and child.

In a recent study by Pinder on how people experienced living with chronic illness, particularly Parkinson’s Disease (PD), she identified that PD sufferers actively seek to achieve control over their lives in order to maintain some sort of normality not only for themselves but for those around them. As normality is different for each individual each individual’s priorities will be different and change over time. (Ruth Pinder, 2003, page 114 to ...

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