2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2011.01150.x
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Medicare, Ethics, and Reflexive Longevity: Governing Time and Treatment in an Aging Society

Abstract: The clinical activities that constitute longevity making in the United States are perhaps the quintessential example of a dynamic modern temporality, characterized by the quest for risk reduction, the powerful progress narratives of science and medicine, and the personal responsibility of calculating the worth of more time in relation to medical options and age. This article explores how medicine materializes and problematizes time through a discussion of ethicality—in this case, the form of governance in whic… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…In considering the theme of usefulness, it is important to realize what may motivate an individual to actually be “useful,” and not its opposite, “useless.” The relationship between uselessness/burden narratives and ageing has been well documented in the anthropological literature (see Kaufman and Fjord, ; Buch, ). In ethnographic fieldwork exploring the intersections between diminished personhood and ageing within elderly Chicagoan communities in the United States, Buch () references a geriatric physician who comments on pervasive feelings of worthlessness in her geriatric patients, with such individuals struggling to reconcile feelings of incapacity with a desire to remain useful to society.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In considering the theme of usefulness, it is important to realize what may motivate an individual to actually be “useful,” and not its opposite, “useless.” The relationship between uselessness/burden narratives and ageing has been well documented in the anthropological literature (see Kaufman and Fjord, ; Buch, ). In ethnographic fieldwork exploring the intersections between diminished personhood and ageing within elderly Chicagoan communities in the United States, Buch () references a geriatric physician who comments on pervasive feelings of worthlessness in her geriatric patients, with such individuals struggling to reconcile feelings of incapacity with a desire to remain useful to society.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Smoking habits and hypercholesteremia were both definitive risk for cerebrovascular disease. Smoking habits and hypercholesteremia were also the confirmed risk for dementia, depression, disability and so on, all of these increased mortality rate in the elderly above 65 years [28,29]. The high mortality in the elderly could remove those with hypercholesteremia, which was caused by current smoking.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars studying aging in the United States have drawn attention to the ways in which aspirations to successful aging frequently hinge on the valorization of a self‐reliant individualism, closely tied to the proliferation of free market rationales and policies, the retraction of state services, and the promissory values of biotechnologies (Kaufman and Fjord ; Lamb ). Insofar as biomedical technologies progressively reconfigure senescence into a pathogenic process to be resisted (Lafontaine ; Marshall and Katz ; Mykytyn ), biomedical life extensions operates in a speculative horizon that fuses capitalist growth with the economic and symbolic valuation of “life itself” (Cooper ; Rose ; Waldby and Mitchell ).…”
Section: Aging Wellness and Self‐care In Russiamentioning
confidence: 99%