Sexuality and gender Many aspects of human sexuality have been medicalized and pathologised by psychiatry, psychology and the
pharmaceutical industry. This includes masturbation, homosexuality, erectile dysfunction and female sexual dysfunction. Medicalization has also been used to justify sexualisation of
transgender people,
intersex people and those diagnosed with
HIV/AIDS. The medicalization of sexuality has resulted in increased
social control,
disease mongering, surveillance, and increased funding in some research areas of
sexology and human physiology. The practice of medicalizing sexuality has been widely criticized, with one of the most common criticisms being that the
biological reductionism and other tenets of medicalisation, individualism and naturalism, generally fail to take into account
sociocultural factors contributing to
human sexuality. The
HIV/AIDS pandemic allegedly caused from the 1980s a "profound re-medicalization of sexuality". The diagnosis of
premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) has caused some controversy when
fluoxetine (also known as Prozac) was being repackaged as a PMDD therapy under the trade named
Sarafem. The psychologist
Peggy Kleinplatz has criticized the diagnosis as the medicalization of normal human behavior. Other medicalized aspects of women's health include
infertility,
breastfeeding, the childbirth process, and
postpartum depression. Although it has received less attention, it is claimed that
masculinity has also faced medicalization, being deemed damaging to health and requiring regulation or enhancement through drugs, technologies or therapy. Specifically,
erectile dysfunction was once considered a natural part of the aging process in men, but has since been medicalized as a problem,
late-onset hypogonadism. According to Mike Fitzpatrick, resistance to medicalization was a common theme of the
gay liberation,
anti-psychiatry, and
feminist movements of the 1970s, but now there is "virtually no resistance to the advance of government intrusion in lifestyle if it is deemed to be justified in terms of public health." Moreover, the pressure for medicalization now comes from society itself as well as from the government and medical professionals.
Benjamin Rush, the father of American psychiatry, claimed that Black people had black skin because they were ill with hereditary leprosy. Consequently, he considered
vitiligo as a "spontaneous cure". According to
Franco Basaglia and his followers, whose approach pointed out the role of psychiatric institutions in the control and medicalization of deviant behaviors and social problems, psychiatry is used as the provider of scientific support for social control to the existing establishment, and the ensuing standards of deviance and normality brought about repressive views of discrete social groups. As scholars have long argued, governmental and medical institutions code menaces to authority as mental diseases during political disturbances. According to Nicholas Kittrie, a number of phenomena considered "deviant", such as
alcoholism,
drug addiction,
prostitution,
pedophilia, and masturbation ("self-abuse"), were originally considered as moral, then legal, and now medical problems. Innumerable other conditions such as obesity, smoking cigarettes, draft malingering, bachelorhood, divorce, unwanted pregnancy, kleptomania, and grief, have been declared diseases by medical and psychiatric authorities. Due to these perceptions, peculiar deviants were subjected to moral, then legal, and now medical modes of social control. According to
Thomas Szasz, "the
therapeutic state swallows up everything human on the seemingly rational ground that nothing falls outside the province of health and medicine, just as the theological state had swallowed up everything human on the perfectly rational ground that nothing falls outside the province of God and religion".
Labeling theory A 2002 editorial in the
British Medical Journal warned of inappropriate medicalization leading to disease mongering, where the boundaries of the definition of illnesses are expanded to include personal problems as medical problems or risks of diseases are emphasized to broaden the market for medications. The authors noted: == Healthism ==