Publication | Closed Access
Pediatric bipolar disorder: An object of study in the creation of an illness
26
Citations
15
References
2007
Year
PsychiatryPsychiatric ConsensusPediatricsDepressionPediatric Bipolar DisorderMood SpectrumPsychiatric DisorderMental HealthParent Pressure GroupsMedicineChild Mental HealthChild PsychiatryHealth Services ResearchPsychopathologyBipolar Disorder
In the past decade bipolar disorder in children has been diagnosed with rapidly increasing frequency in North America, despite a century of psychiatric consensus that manic-depressive illness rarely had its onset before adolescence. This emergence has happened against a background of vigorous pharmaceutical company marketing of bipolar disorder in adults. In the absence of a license demonstrating efficacy for their compound for bipolar disorder in children, however, companies cannot actively market pediatric bipolar disorder. This paper explores some mechanisms that play a part in spreading the recognition of a disorder in populations for which pharmaceutical companies do not have a license. These include the role of academic experts, parent pressure groups, measurement technologies and the availability of possible remedies even if not licensed.
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