TY - JOUR
T1 - Contextualising accounts of illness
T2 - Notions of responsibility and blame in white and South Asian respondents' accounts of diabetes causation
AU - Lawton, Julia
AU - Ahmad, Naureen
AU - Peel, Elizabeth A.
AU - Hallowell, Nina
PY - 2007/9
Y1 - 2007/9
N2 - We undertook a secondary analysis of in-depth interviews with white (n = 32) and Pakistani and Indian (n = 32) respondents who had type 2 diabetes, which explored their perceptions and understandings of disease causation. We observed subtle, but important, differences in the ways in which these respondent groups attributed responsibility and blame for developing the disease. Whereas Pakistani and Indian respondents tended to externalise responsibility, highlighting their life circumstances in general and/or their experiences of migrating to Britain in accounting for their diabetes (or the behaviours they saw as giving rise to it), white respondents, by contrast, tended to emphasise the role of their own lifestyle 'choices' and 'personal failings'. In seeking to understand these differences, we argue for a conceptual and analytical approach which embraces both micro- (i.e. everyday) and macro- (i.e. cultural) contextual factors and experiences. In so doing, we provide a critique of social scientific studies of lay accounts/understandings of health and illness. We suggest that greater attention needs to be paid to the research encounter (that is, to who is looking at whom and in what circumstances) to understand the different kinds of contexts researchers have highlighted in presenting and interpreting their data. © 2007 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
AB - We undertook a secondary analysis of in-depth interviews with white (n = 32) and Pakistani and Indian (n = 32) respondents who had type 2 diabetes, which explored their perceptions and understandings of disease causation. We observed subtle, but important, differences in the ways in which these respondent groups attributed responsibility and blame for developing the disease. Whereas Pakistani and Indian respondents tended to externalise responsibility, highlighting their life circumstances in general and/or their experiences of migrating to Britain in accounting for their diabetes (or the behaviours they saw as giving rise to it), white respondents, by contrast, tended to emphasise the role of their own lifestyle 'choices' and 'personal failings'. In seeking to understand these differences, we argue for a conceptual and analytical approach which embraces both micro- (i.e. everyday) and macro- (i.e. cultural) contextual factors and experiences. In so doing, we provide a critique of social scientific studies of lay accounts/understandings of health and illness. We suggest that greater attention needs to be paid to the research encounter (that is, to who is looking at whom and in what circumstances) to understand the different kinds of contexts researchers have highlighted in presenting and interpreting their data. © 2007 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
KW - context
KW - diabetes
KW - disease causation
KW - lay understandings
KW - secondary analysis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=35748960507&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118532263/abstract
U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01036.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01036.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 17986021
SN - 0141-9889
VL - 29
SP - 891
EP - 906
JO - Sociology of health and illness
JF - Sociology of health and illness
IS - 6
ER -