9781440831768-1440831769-The Wrong Prescription for Women: How Medicine and Media Create a 'Need' for Treatments, Drugs, and Surgery (Women's Psychology)

The Wrong Prescription for Women: How Medicine and Media Create a 'Need' for Treatments, Drugs, and Surgery (Women's Psychology)

ISBN-13: 9781440831768
ISBN-10: 1440831769
Author: Joan C. Chrisler, Maureen C. McHugh
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: Praeger
Format: Hardcover 312 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781440831768
ISBN-10: 1440831769
Author: Joan C. Chrisler, Maureen C. McHugh
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: Praeger
Format: Hardcover 312 pages

Summary

The Wrong Prescription for Women: How Medicine and Media Create a 'Need' for Treatments, Drugs, and Surgery (Women's Psychology) (ISBN-13: 9781440831768 and ISBN-10: 1440831769), written by authors Joan C. Chrisler, Maureen C. McHugh, was published by Praeger in 2015. With an overall rating of 4.2 stars, it's a notable title among other Pharmacy (Pharmacology) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Wrong Prescription for Women: How Medicine and Media Create a 'Need' for Treatments, Drugs, and Surgery (Women's Psychology) (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Pharmacy books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

This groundbreaking book challenges the medicalized approach to women's experiences including menstruation, pregnancy, and menopause and suggests that there are better ways for women to cope with real issues they may face.

Before any woman diets, douches, botoxes, reduces, reconstructs, or fills a prescription for antidepressants, statins, hormones, menstrual suppressants, or diet pills, she should read this book. Contesting common medical practice, the book addresses the many aspects of women's lives that have been targeted as "deficient" in order to support the billion-dollar profits of the medical-pharmacological industry and suggests alternatives to these "remedies."

The contributors―psychologists, sociologists, and health experts―are also gender experts and feminist scholars who recognize the ways in which gender is an important aspect of the human experience. In this eye-opening work, they challenge the marketing and "science" that increasingly render women's bodies and experiences as a series of symptoms, diseases, and dysfunctions that require treatment by medical professionals who prescribe pharmaceutical and surgical interventions. Each article in the book addresses the marketing of a specific "condition" that has been constructed in a way that convinces a woman that her body is inadequate or her experience and behavior are not good enough. Among the topics addressed are menstruation, menopause, pregnancy, post-partum adjustment, sexual desire, weight, body dissatisfaction, moodiness, depression, grief, and anxiety.


• Addresses popular topics including the "thin ideal," the health realities of weight, cosmetic surgery, birth as a medical emergency, sexual desire and menopause, depression, and mourning

• Critiques the "science" and marketing that sees all women's complaints as symptoms, diseases, and dysfunctions requiring medical treatment

• Explains how psychological and social factors affect women's health and argues for a more well-founded approach such as using talk therapy first

• Explains why events like menopause, sexual desire, body dissatisfaction, and grief are examples of issues often not best treated with drugs, but with psychotherapy for permanent resolution

• Will appeal to all adult women who might, or do, question current medical approaches and media promises

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