Article(electronic)October 2011

Fever epidemics and fever clinics: Institutionalising disease and cure in contemporary Kerala

In: Contributions to Indian sociology, Volume 45, Issue 3, p. 373-397

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Abstract

During the mid-1990s, the state of Kerala witnessed a wave of 'fever epidemics', which the government tackled by establishing fever clinics. Based on an ethnography of these clinics, this article examines how, from being a symptom of the body's defensive response, fever has itself become institutionalised as a disease. It argues that the institutionalisation of fever as a disease has occurred through two sets of practices: first, discursively at the societal level by interactions among health professionals, the media, organisations repre-senting various systems of medicine, and ordinary people; and second, curatively at the clinic while rendering fever care, including diagnosis and treatment. The article shows that, despite the discursive prevalence of a dominant system of allopathic medicine, the practices at the fever clinic are not consistently based on an allopathic understanding of physiology and pathology but rely on skilled trial-and-error which incorporates plural medical traditions. The article critically evaluates the effects of institutionalisation in terms of narrowing how fever is understood and how it may be treated.

Languages

English

Publisher

SAGE Publications

ISSN: 0973-0648

DOI

10.1177/006996671104500303

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