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      What is wrong with 'being a pill-taker'? The special case of statins.

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          Abstract

          In an interview study of decision-making about statins, many participants said they took pills regularly, yet described themselves as 'not really pill-takers'. This paper explores this paradox and its implications. The practice of pill-taking itself can constitute a challenge to the presentation of moral adequacy, beyond the potential for rendering stigmatised illnesses visible. Meeting this challenge involves a complex process of calibrating often-conflicting moral imperatives: to be concerned, but not too concerned, over one's health; to be informed, but not over-informed; and deferential but not over-deferential to medical expertise. This calibration reflects a broader tension between rival tropes: embracing medical progress and resisting medicalisation. Participants who take statins present them as unquestionably necessary; 'needing' pills, as opposed to choosing to take them, serves as a defence against the devalued identity of being a pill-taker. However, needing to take statins offers an additional threat to identity, because taking statins is widely perceived to be an alternative strategy to 'choosing a healthy lifestyle'. This perception underpins a responsibilising health promotion discourse that shapes and complicates the work participants do to avoid presenting themselves as 'pill-takers'. The salience of this discourse should be acknowledged where discussions of medicalisation use statins as an example.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Sociol Health Illn
          Sociology of health & illness
          Wiley-Blackwell
          1467-9566
          0141-9889
          May 2017
          : 39
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
          Article
          10.1111/1467-9566.12509
          27862018
          ec0cb4e6-4b63-470c-8ea4-7330de05839a
          History

          adherence,cardiovascular disease,healthism,identity,medicalisation,surveillance medicine

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