ABSTRACT

Increasingly, pharmaceuticals are available as the solutions to a wide range of human health problems and health risks, minor and major. This book portrays how pharmaceutical use is, at once, a solution to, and a difficulty for, everyday life.

Exploring lived experiences of people at different stages of the life course and from different countries around the world, this collection highlights the benefits as well as the challenges of using medicines on an everyday basis. It raises questions about the expectations associated with the use of medications, the uncertainty about a condition or about the duration of a medicine regimen for it, the need to negotiate the stigma associated with a condition or a type of medicine, the need to access and pay for medicines and the need to schedule medicine use appropriately, and the need to manage medicines’ effects and side effects. The chapters include original empirical research, literature review and theoretical analysis, and convey the sociological and phenomenological complexity of ‘living pharmaceutical lives’.

This book is of interest to all those studying and researching social pharmacy and the sociology of health and illness.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Living pharmaceutical lives

chapter 2|16 pages

Drugs at work

Implicated in the making of the neoliberal worker 1

chapter 3|15 pages

Medication-use narratives on the margins

Managing type 2 diabetes without medical insurance 1

chapter 4|15 pages

Medicines use for severe asthma

People’s perspectives

chapter 5|13 pages

Pregnancy, urinary tract infections and antibiotics

Prenatal attachment and competing health priorities

chapter 6|17 pages

‘What the medications do is that lovely four-lettered word – hope’

A phenomenological investigation of older people’s lived experiences of medication use following cancer diagnosis

chapter 7|15 pages

The paradox of vaccine hesitancy and refusal

Public health and the moral work of motherhood

chapter 8|13 pages

The pharmaceutical imaginary of heart disease

Pleasant futures and problematic present 1

chapter 9|23 pages

A shot in the dark?

Ontario girls, informed consent and HPV vaccination 1

chapter 12|18 pages

The drama of medicines

Narratives of living with postural tachycardia syndrome

chapter 13|18 pages

(Developing) pharmaceutical solutions to COVID-19

Navigating global tensions around the distribution of therapeutics and vaccines

chapter 14|9 pages

Conclusion

What of pharmaceutical lives?