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Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #1: Biomedicine as a cultural system 1. Biomedicine can be regarded as a cultural system BECAUSE A. It is only used by specific cultural groups in Western society B. Its scientific knowledge base is based on hypotheticodeductive reasoning, and is capable of being disproven C. It incorporates a set of transmissible knowledges that frame the worldview of believers D. It is used more frequently in Western society than ayurvedic medicine E. Many biomedical practitioners incorporate in their practices activities which are not evidence-based. 2. Crazy Little Thing Called Love. Are Ben Lee and Paul Coelho diseased? Ben Lee’s song Catch My Disease (2008 – those of you who don’t remember it can look it up on YouTube) is about his own feeling of overwhelming goodwill. In one of his 29 books Paul Coelho writes “Love is a disease no one wants to get rid of. Those who catch it never try to get better, and those who suffer do not wish to be cured." (The Zahir, 2005) Using the definition of disease and illness that we use in this lecture, does either of these gentlemen really have a disease? Does either of them have an illness? Why or why not? [NB: This question does not ask you to express your opinion on the music of Ben Lee or the writing of Paul Coelho] 3. What are the foundational disciplines of biomedicine and why? 4. “The doctor said I must have had breast cancer for two years, but I just kept on with my career because I felt fine” [Kylie Minogue]. Assume that in the two years before diagnosis, Kylie had been in France for one month, and then travelled to the US which had a higher incidence of breast cancer for six months. She then lived in the UK for seventeen months. Assume also she has carried the gene which predisposed her to breast cancer since her birth in Australia. In what country did she become ill? Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #2: Hidden values in biomedicine (More than one answer may be correct) 1. Cogito ergo sum (“I think therefore I am”) means: A. When we use our powers of reason, we can understand others better B. Our ability to reason enables us to recognise that there are dual perspectives on everything C. Our ability for rational thought sets us apart from animals D. Our ability to think rationally limits our ability to see things as they truly are E. Our ability to reason is the basis of our selfhood. 2. The implications of the Cartesian cogito for medicine are that A. The emotions are not integral elements determining who we are B. What people say they feel is as trustworthy and valid as what the doctor can deduce from examination and interrogation C. Brain-dead people are not fully human D. The mind and the brain are similar concepts E. Bodily experience (of the patient) is secondary to cognitive understanding (by the doctor or the patient) 3. Psychosomatic medicine was an attempt to integrate the experience of the body into the how illnesses and physical disabilities are caused and/or maintained by psychological dynamics. It was intended to recognize the integration of the patient’s experience of illness into the ways in which the illness or disease became expressed. This category of illness failed in its quest to find equal space within medicine for the lived experience and organic dysfunction because: A. Patients saw themselves as not having a valid illness if they were told it had a non-organic component B. Doctors did not see that their role extended to managing illnesses that may not have an organic component C. Attempts to manage psychosomatic illness continue to use attempts to impose rational thought upon the experience of the body, thus reasserting the primacy of rationality over suffering. D. Alternative therapists have taken over dealing with psychosomatic illnesses. E. Psychosomatic explanations for illness behaviour are outdated with advances in neurobiology. 4. Who said what? I suppose the body to be just a statue or a machine made of earth. [On humans] "Oh, there's a brain all right. It's just that the brain is made out of meat! …Yes, thinking meat! Conscious meat! Loving meat. Dreaming meat. The meat is the whole deal!" Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips We exist as material beings in a material world, all of whose phenomena are the consequences of material relations among material entities. One of these is by Descartes, one is Richard Lewontin, the evolutionary biologist, and one is an alien describing humans1. The first is a Cartesian perspective (note how the “I” who supposes is separate from the body). The second and the third are materialist perspectives. What is the relevance of materialism in medicine? When (if ever) might a dualist perspective be useful? Spend five minutes reading Terry Bisson’s classic short story “They’re made of meat” here http://www.terrybisson.com/page6/page6.html 1 Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #3: Biomedical nosologies in social and cultural context (More than one answer may be correct) 1. A nosology is a branch of medical science dealing with: A. The distribution of diseases B. The classification of diseases C. The nature and effects of diseases D. The phenomena that contradict physical laws E. The treatment of disease 2. Which of the following is a nosology? A. SLUDGE – Salivation, Lacrimation, Urination, Defecation, Gastrointestinal Upset, Emesis B. The lymphatic system C. WHO Classification of Myeloid Neoplasms D. The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme Schedule E. Adult Disability Assessment Tool in the Social Security Act 1991 3. Whether or not alcoholism should be classified as a disease was the subject of a great deal of conjecture in the early twentieth century. McGoldrick (1954) makes the “no” case: Alcoholism is no more a disease than thieving or lynching. Like these, it is the product of a distortion in outlook, a way of life bred of ignorance and frustration.” A century and a half earlier, Trotter made the “yes” case: “In medical language, I consider drunkenness, strictly speaking, to be a disease, produced by a remote cause in giving birth to actions and movements in a living body that disorder the functions of health.”2 (a) On what grounds would alcoholism be considered a disease? If so, how should it be classified? (b) The Women’s Temperance Union (an organisation that advocated prohibition) was very active in promoting the view that alcoholism was a disease. Why do you think this group would take this view? 4. When AIDS was first recognised in the 1980s a dispute broke out about whether this should be classified primarily as a haematological, immunological or infectious (or tropical) disease. (a) Complete the following table by filling in the discipline under which you would classify AIDS depending on what you used as your classificatory criteria 2 Quotes lifted from The Natural History of Alcoholism Revisited, by G. E. Valliant (Harvard University Press, 1995) which is a terrific overview. Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM CLASSIFICATION BY Christine Phillips DISCIPLINE(S) CLASSIFIED UNDER (eg gastroenterology, respiratory medicine) Aetiology Symptoms Clinical distribution of cases1 Disease mechanisms 1 In the early 1980s, AIDS was said to affect Haitians, heroin addicts, homosexuals and haemophiliacs. This posed a tricky problem as it could not be classified as a geographic disease (cf “Asian flu”, or “Lassa fever”). WHO is now quite careful about geographic classifications – note how SARS (Sudden Acute Respiratory Syndrome was given a name that did not indicate country of origin, in order not to stigmatise China) (b) Why did it matter to the medical profession how AIDS was classified? (c) The first Chairperson of the AIDS Taskforce in Australia in the 1980s was Professor David Penington. He became the public face of Australia’s pragmatic and successful campaign to control the spread of HIV-related infection. Apart from his intrinsic qualities, why was a specialist from this background chosen to be the public face of the AIDS response? Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #4: Embodiment of sickness and distress (More than one answer may be correct) 1. Embodiment refers to: A. The bodily aspects of human subjectivity B. The political control of bodies through exercising control over citizens’ liberty C. The arrangement of anatomical organs within the body D. The physiological function of organs within the body E. The ability to enter into others’ subjectivity 2. It’s Happy Hour in heaven. Merleau-Ponty and Descartes meet to share a bottle of Merlot3. Who says what? “I particularly enjoy this wine because of its provenance; the grape comes from the vineyards of Orange and the production process was especially fine.” Nothing. He is too busy feeling the taste sensations from different parts of his palate. 3. Bodily expressions of illness draw on cultural repertoires of distress and the social and political contexts that shape them. The following are generally considered to be culturebound illnesses (ie they only occur in some cultures). Match the illnesses to the social or cultural context. Susto4 Koro5 Running amok6 Going postal Bulimia Political and entertainment culture that popularises violence Strongly networked society with social expectation of outbursts Cultural equation of thinness with beauty Female-subordinate culture in which religious healing is commonly practised Cultural preoccupation with male sexual performance Is it correct to term these conditions culture-bound syndromes? Why or why not? 3 Thanks to Tim Lovell (ANUMS Yr 2011) for suggesting this problem as a memory aid Susto = an illness attributed to a frightening event that causes the soul to leave the body, leading to symptoms of unhappiness and sickness (Latin America) 5 Koro = period of intense anxiety associated with belief that penis is retreating into body and will cause death (Malay word, found in many regions of SE Asia) – occasionally occurs in epidemics of panic, eg in Singapore in 1967 6 Running amok = a dissociative episode characterized by a period of brooding followed by an outburst of violent, aggressive, or homicidal behavior directed at people and objects. The episode tends to be precipitated by a perceived insult or slight and seems to be prevalent only among males.(Malay) 4 Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips 4. “At home, no one can hear you scream.” Post-natal depression has been described as a Western culture-bound syndrome. If so, what cultural repertoires of distress does it draw on, and how does post-natal depression reflect its social and political and context? 5. Pediatric plumbism is endemic in some indigenous communities, but is rare in nonindigenous communities. Although plumbism is not an idiom of distress (rather, an oldfashioned term for an overload condition), the behaviour that led to it has arisen in a particular social, cultural and political context. Identifying these contextual layers is important for a nuanced public health approach to this youth epidemic. (a) What is plumbism?7 (b) How do the subjective feelings of someone with plumbism reflect their social, political and/or cultural context? (c) If you were a public health professional, where would you invest your intervention dollars to have maximal impact? 7 Google it if you don’t know. Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #5: The therapeutic process 1. Match the type of doctor-patient relationship to the presenting clinical condition. Give your reasons for choosing the one that you chose (NB: more than one type of relationship may be appropriate for each case – just explain your reasons for this case). (a) A patient, aged 72, comes to you with a problem of escalating anxiety. He has pages of Internet print-outs on different drugs and wants to discuss with you in detail the right medication. When he was in Serbia he was given a really excellent medication and he would like to have this prescribed here. It sounds like a high dose valium equivalent. His English isn’t very good. (b) A 15 year old girl presents to request going on the pill. Her girlfriends have been talking about it and she wants the one that will stop her having acne. Her acne is mild. She isn’t sexually active. (c) A 37 year old woman presents for a health screen at the behest of her work. The only thing of note is that she is very obese (BMI 39). She says that she tries to “be good”, but she is always hungry and can’t stop herself. (d) A 28 year old forklift driver is brought in by his workmate after he had a funny turn at work. He can’t remember what happened, but is now feeling well if a little tired, and is keen to get back to work. His workmate’s description of the funny turn is that he suddenly slumped over his desk and both his arms and legs began to twitch uncontrollably. This occurred shortly after a phone call from his mother. 2. What is the practitioner-patient relationship which tends to be used by alternative practitioners? A. Consumerist B. Parentalist C. Partnership D. Interpretivist Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #6: Suffering and social inequality 1 1.The epidemiologic triad consists of host, agent and environment. Categorise the elements in the second column according to the component of the epidemiologic triad that they represent Host Agent Environment Hospital cooling towers Legionella pneumonia SARS The Hulk Mycelia family Asthmatic children 2. The Malthusian argument is A. that population increases arithmetically while the capacity to support it increases geometrically B. that infectious disease should die out with improvements in health technology C. that ageing humans exceed the capacity of health systems to look after them D. that reductions in fertility are associated with increases in lifespan E. that plagues and pestilences are nature’s way of rebalancing population growth 3. McKeown’s hypothesis is A. that decreases in infant mortality are attributable to changes in the incidence of infectious disease B. that improvements in nutrition have led to reductions in the incidence of infections C. that population increases arithmetically with the increase in the carrying capacity of the land D. that decreases in fertility are associated with a population shift from high rates of high infection to one of high rates of chronic disease E. an underestimation of the impact of medical technology on reductions in the incidence of infections 4. “Flesh-eating bacteria savages young girl in hospital”: Daily Telegraph headline. The following are all explanations for this phenomenon. Complete the table listing the element of the epidemiologic triad invoked and the type of health response that would be prioritised for each explanation (example in the first row). Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Explanation The young girl was undernourished, and therefore prone to serious infection The bacteria is unusually virulent and can attack anyone Hospital has poor capacity to control the spread of this bacteria The bacteria has been allowed to become resistant to multiple antibiotics because of high rates of antibiotic use in the community Christine Phillips Which element of the epidemiologic triad (host, agent, environment) is invoked in this explanation? Host What is the health system response triggered by this explanation? Review reasons the girl was undernourished and promote better intake Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #7: Suffering and social inequality 2: AIDS and other catastrophes (More than one answer may be correct) 1. In 2005, Goulburn had been in a severe drought for three years and its dams were at 8% capacity. From the perspective of Amartya Sen, why did the citizens of Goulburn not suffer famine? List four reasons. 2. In an evolving pandemic, there is often a process of locating the cause of infection elsewhere. Name the virus that caused the following illnesses, and who or what was being stigmatised as either originating the infection or being the major risk group. Name for illness Virus/Bacteria Who is being stigmatised and why? The English disease Spanish flu Yellow fever Gay related immune deficiency syndrome The French disease [STUDENTS: these details are for understanding only and are not examinable] 3. The HIV pandemic is the central pandemic of the modern era. Australia is often held up as an example of a country which responded rapidly and effectively to the pandemic. In broad terms, outline the elements of this successful strategy. 4. In 1996 there was a syphilis outbreak among among the schoolchildren of Rockdale County in Georgia in the USA. This generated a great deal of concern and publicity in the US, as they were in their early teens, and had wealthy parents. There was a well known documentary on this presenting the outbreak as essentially due to parental neglect, and boredom in a particularly boring part of Georgia. Other explanations may have been: A.Particularly virulent syphilis infection spread through non-sexual means B. Reduced capacity among girls to advocate for themselves in sexual situations C. Rockdale county had a strong Christian community that advocated abstinence D. Rockdale county public health services failed to perform adequate contact tracing in the early days of the outbreak. E. Rockdale county had few youth-friendly health services F. Penicillin injections (standard treatment for syphilis) are very painful. G. Some of the children had a genetic predisposition to being super-spreaders of syphilis. For each of the above, label the reason as host/agent/environment. If you’re unsure, have a guess and give a rationale. Where would you, as a public health physician, throw your Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips energies to reduce the syphilis epidemic? Or would you decide just to wait it out, and if so why? Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #8: The Placebo Effect (More than one answer may be correct) 1. You have timetravelled to Medieval England. Timetravelling always gives you a headache, but fortunately you are taken to the village healer, Mad Meg, who treats you with a concoction of tree bark and bugs. You have never had this treatment and Mad Meg strikes you as very odd. An hour later you do notice that your headache has improved quite a bit. List possible explanations for the improvement. 2. Improvements in motor performance in patients with Parkinson’s after sham implanation of dopaminergic neurones into the brain represent A. A placebo effect, in that the patient expected to get better and did B. A placebo effect, in that the patient had been conditioned by their own dopaminergic neurons C. A nocebo effect, in that the patient was likely to be disappointed that he had not had the correct surgery D. A nocebo effect, in that patients who did have real implantation of dopaminergic neurones were more likely to be contaminated with prions E. An opportunity to sue the hospital for failing to provide real medical treatment. 3. “Prayer works in mysterious ways”. From a medical perspective, what are these mysterious ways? 4. A 36 year old woman discovers she has breast cancer. She has a biopsy and oestrogen receptors and has a poorly-differentiated tumour, which has a poor outcome. She begins treatment with radiotherapy and oestrogen-blockers. She is offered genetic testing for herself, her sisters and her daughters to see if they carry the BRCA-1 gene, making them more susceptible to breast cancer. List the occasions in this clinical history where a nocebo effect may occur, explaining your answer. Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips LECTURE #9: The location of death (More than one answer may be correct) 1. With regard to the location of death in modern medicine, which of the following is true? A. We define death as the cessation of the heartbeat B. Accounts of out-of-body experiences before death support the argument that the soul may lie in the brain. C. Bodies that do not putrefy are technically not considered dead. D. The Cartesian cogito supports the notion of death being defined through cessation of brain function. E. Life support technologies reinforce the notion that death is located in the brain. 2. At the end of the Edgar Allen Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher, the last surviving member of the family, Roderick, reminisces Gothically about his dead sister Madeleine: “We have put her living in the tomb! Said I not that my senses were acute? I now tell you that I heard her first feeble movements in the hollow coffin.” Had Roderick been more prudent, what could he have done to ensure that Madeleine wasn’t buried alive? 3. Japan, in contrast to most nations with developed medical systems, took many decades to embrace transplant surgery. List four reasons for this. 4. Define the elements of a good death for you. Do they reflect your own personal experience, or do they draw on cultural notions of the good death? How does biomedicine define the good death, and are there differences within biomedicine about what constitutes a good death? Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips CLINICAL SKILLS SESSION #1: Multicultural Health (More than one answer may be correct) 1. Which of the following is/are correct in relation to the explanatory model of illness? A. Explanatory models of illness are of particular use for people from immigrant backgrounds B. The elements of the explanatory model incorporate questions about the nature of illness and the person’s interpretation of them C. The evidence-based perspective that asthma should be treated with relievers (β2 agonists) and preventers (eg steroids) is an explanatory model of illness D. The belief that epilepsy may result from a curse is an explanatory model of illness E. To explore an explanatory model of illness it is best to know something of the culture of the person expressing the belief. 2. In relation to Australia’s migrant population, which of the following is/are correct? A. Australia has the world’s second highest per-capita population of Holocaust survivors outside Israel. B. Australia and the US are the OECD’s most diverse multicultural societies. C. One in three Australians was born overseas or has a parent born overseas. D. The largest influx of migrants into Australia occurred after the Vietnam war with asylum-seekers arriving by sea. E. People born in New Zealand currently constitute the highest population of residents born overseas in Australia 3. When are the times in health care or life events, when it might be particularly important to consider a patient’s particular explanatory model? 4. What is gratuitous concurrence? A. The cultural process of agreeing to a yes/no question even when the true answer would be no. B. A politeness convention observed in some cultures C. The cultural process of needing to have agreement from more than one person when making a decision of consequence D. A cultural strategy for reaching a community-based consensus E. A gratitude convention whereby more than one person thanks the healthcare provider at once. 5. 5. You suspect that gratuitous concurrence is a factor in the responses by the patient to the clinical consultation. What strategies might you use? Test Yourself – QUESTIONS SFM Christine Phillips CLINICAL SKILLS SESSION #2: Social Disadvantage (More than one answer may be correct) 1. Define: A. Absolute poverty B. Relative poverty C. Transitional poverty D. Elective poverty E. Intergenerational poverty 2. Which of the above have/has the largest impact(s) in relation to health care? 3. Which of the following would be considered an attribute of someone with poor health literacy? A. Inability to calculate a half dose (eg can’t work out that half a tablet = number of milligrams of a dose) B. Inability to describe the chambers of the heart. C. Inability to read at a Grade 6 level. D. Inability to understand the difference between different cadres of health professionals (eg nurses and nurse practitioners) E. Inability to describe how and why one should take prescribed medication. 4. Explain the elements that you would explore when taking a social disadvantage snapshot and why they are relevant to health care delivery.