Personalized Medicine (PM) is an evolving and often missinterpreted concept and no agreement of personalization exist. We examined the PM discourse towards foucauldian archeological and genealogical analysis to understand the meaning of “personalization” in medicine. In the archaeological analysis, the historical evolution is characterized by the coexistence of two epistemologies: the holistic vision and the omic sciences. The genealogical analysis shows how these epistemologies may affect the meaning of “person” and, consequently, the ontology of patients. Additionally, substitutions/confusions of the term PM are related to continuously evolving medical knowledge and new technologies; different etymological roots of “personalization” and “person”; and cultural differences. In conclusion, if the definition of “personalization” in medicine is not clear, patients might get wrong expectations about what is achievable for their health. Therefore, epistemological trends should not be separated as they drive same goals: providing accurate diagnosis and treatments based on large data to predict disease progression.

Cesario, A., Lohmeyer, F., D'Oria, M., Manto, A., Scambia, G. (2021). The personalized medicine discourse: archaeology and genealogy. MEDICINE, HEALTH CARE AND PHILOSOPHY, 24(2), 247-253 [10.1007/s11019-020-09997-6].

The personalized medicine discourse: archaeology and genealogy

D'Oria M.
;
2021

Abstract

Personalized Medicine (PM) is an evolving and often missinterpreted concept and no agreement of personalization exist. We examined the PM discourse towards foucauldian archeological and genealogical analysis to understand the meaning of “personalization” in medicine. In the archaeological analysis, the historical evolution is characterized by the coexistence of two epistemologies: the holistic vision and the omic sciences. The genealogical analysis shows how these epistemologies may affect the meaning of “person” and, consequently, the ontology of patients. Additionally, substitutions/confusions of the term PM are related to continuously evolving medical knowledge and new technologies; different etymological roots of “personalization” and “person”; and cultural differences. In conclusion, if the definition of “personalization” in medicine is not clear, patients might get wrong expectations about what is achievable for their health. Therefore, epistemological trends should not be separated as they drive same goals: providing accurate diagnosis and treatments based on large data to predict disease progression.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Epistemology; Health care; Person; Personalized medicine;
English
2021
24
2
247
253
reserved
Cesario, A., Lohmeyer, F., D'Oria, M., Manto, A., Scambia, G. (2021). The personalized medicine discourse: archaeology and genealogy. MEDICINE, HEALTH CARE AND PHILOSOPHY, 24(2), 247-253 [10.1007/s11019-020-09997-6].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/506443
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