Publication | Closed Access
Classification, Disease, and Diagnosis
74
Citations
43
References
2011
Year
Humanity And MedicineDiagnosisPathologyDisease ClassificationMedical DiagnosisMedical ClassificationMedical HistoryContemporary MedicineNeuropathologyDisease DiagnosisPhilosophy Of MedicineClinical SociologyMeaningful ChunksNursingClassificationMedicalizationClinical SciencesMedicineHealth Informatics
Classification shapes medicine and guides its practice. Understanding classification must be part of the quest to better understand the social context and implications of diagnosis. Classifications are part of the human work that provides a foundation for the recognition and study of illness: deciding how the vast expanse of nature can be partitioned into meaningful chunks, stabilizing and structuring what is otherwise disordered. This article explores the aims of classification, their embodiment in medical diagnosis, and the historical traditions of medical classification. It provides a brief overview of the aims and principles of classification and their relevance to contemporary medicine. It also demonstrates how classifications operate as social framing devices that enable and disable communication, assert and refute authority, and are important items for sociological study.
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