Contesting oppressive regimes of truth: A critical feminist re-examination of (bio)psychosocial hegemony in the field of myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome, a disabling condition disproportionately affecting women, is predominantly clinically managed through a (bio)psychosocial lens with psychosocial-inspired therapies, criticised for facilitating social and epistemic injustice, psychological and physical harms. Whilst most literature contesting (bio)psychosocial practices espouses a mainstream scientific perspective, politics and power relations undergirding psychosocial hegemony are better explicated through a critical lens. This article re-examines the ascendancy of psychosocial therapies and related practices through a critical feminist psychology and Foucauldian lens, with a view to locating oppressive practices in their socio-political and cultural context and promoting dialogue on possibilities for positive social change.

Source: Hunt, J. E. (2023, August 10). Contesting oppressive regimes of truth: A critical feminist re-examination of (bio)psychosocial hegemony in the field of myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue syndrome. https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/3g7kp https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/3g7kp/ (Full text)

Feminist perspectives on the social construction of chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

We contrast Western medical views of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) etiology, diagnosis, and treatment with views maintained by a predominantly female CFS population. We argue that the failure of Western medicine to demonstrate a viral etiology for CFS led to a paradigmatic shift in research perspectives, which then embraced psychiatric and sociocultural explanations for CFS. As a result, CFS was delegitimized as a biomedical phenomenon within medical, academic, governmental, and public arenas.

We compare alternative social constructions of CFS with issues pertaining to multiple sclerosis (MS), an illness that similarly predominates among women. Patient perspectives suggest that the history of medical attitudes toward CFS may eventually parallel the transformations that occurred in relation to MS. In particular, the discovery of biological markers for CFS may lay to rest the categorization of CFS as largely within the psychiatric realm.

 

Source: Richman JA, Jason LA, Taylor RR, Jahn SC. Feminist perspectives on the social construction of chronic fatigue syndrome. Health Care Women Int. 2000 Apr-May;21(3):173-85. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11111464