This article explores the making and management of anomaly in scientific work, taking ‘medically unexplained symptoms’ (MUS) as its case. MUS is a category used to characterize health conditions that are widely held to be ambiguous, in terms of their nature, causes and treatment. It has been suggested that MUS is a ‘wastebasket diagnosis’. However, although a powerful metaphor, it does neither the category nor the profession justice: Unlike waste in a wastebasket, unexplained symptoms are not discarded but contained, not ejected but managed. Rather than a ‘wastebasket’, I propose that we instead think about it as a ‘junk drawer’. A junk drawer is an ordering device whose function is the containment of things we want to keep but have nowhere else to put. Based on a critical document analysis of the research literature on MUS (107 research articles from 10 medical journals, published 2001–2016), the article explores how the MUS category is constituted and managed as a junk drawer in medical science.
...More
Article
Alice Street;
(December 2011)
Artefacts of not-knowing: The medical record, the diagnosis and the production of uncertainty in Papua New Guinean biomedicine
(/isis/citation/CBB480850883/)
Article
Annemarie Jutel;
(2021)
Uncertainty and the inconvenient facts of diagnosis
(/isis/citation/CBB249581784/)
Article
Martyn Pickersgill;
(2019)
Psychiatry and the Sociology of Novelty: Negotiating the US National Institute of Mental Health “Research Domain Criteria” (RDoC)
(/isis/citation/CBB630004689/)
Article
Knaapen. Loes;
(October 2013)
Being ‘evidence-based’ in the absence of evidence: The management of non-evidence in guideline development
(/isis/citation/CBB444983980/)
Article
Aragona, Massimiliano;
(2013)
Neopositivism and the DSM Psychiatric Classification. An Epistemological History. Part 1: Theoretical Comparison
(/isis/citation/CBB001320328/)
Article
Rachel Cooper;
(2018)
Understanding the DSM-5: Stasis and Change
(/isis/citation/CBB641094844/)
Article
Koichi Kameda;
Ann H Kelly;
Javier Lezaun;
Ilana Löwy;
(October 2021)
Imperfect diagnosis: The truncated legacies of Zika testing
(/isis/citation/CBB603527462/)
Article
Julia Swallow;
Alexandra Hillman;
(April 2019)
Fear and anxiety: Affects, emotions and care practices in the memory clinic
(/isis/citation/CBB055124638/)
Article
Alexandra Hillman;
Joanna Latimer;
(April 2019)
Somaticization, the making and unmaking of minded persons and the fabrication of dementia
(/isis/citation/CBB034246323/)
Article
Anne Kerr;
Tineke Broer;
Emily Ross;
Sarah Cunningham Burley;
(August 2019)
Polygenic risk-stratified screening for cancer: Responsibilization in public health genomics
(/isis/citation/CBB774833590/)
Article
Madeleine Mant;
(2020)
‘A Little Time Woud Compleat the Cure’: Broken Bones and Fracture Experiences of the Working Poor in London’s General Hospitals During the Long Eighteenth Century
(/isis/citation/CBB726530504/)
Article
Lisa Sigl;
(May 2016)
On the Tacit Governance of Research by Uncertainty: How Early Stage Researchers Contribute to the Governance of Life Science Research
(/isis/citation/CBB119230475/)
Article
Jorge Castillo-Sepúlveda;
Francisco Tirado;
Ana Gálvez;
(2023)
Biopolitics and speculative objects in Chilean health projects
(/isis/citation/CBB679456149/)
Article
Jialin Li;
(January 2021)
Cloaking the Pregnancy: Scientific Uncertainty and Gendered Burden among Middle-class Mothers in Urban China
(/isis/citation/CBB427082772/)
Article
Kruse, Corinna;
(October 2013)
The Bayesian approach to forensic evidence: Evaluating, communicating, and distributing responsibility
(/isis/citation/CBB366782410/)
Article
Steven Tresker;
(2020)
A typology of clinical conditions
(/isis/citation/CBB690319995/)
Article
Hane Htut Maung;
(2016)
Diagnosis and causal explanation in psychiatry
(/isis/citation/CBB953313116/)
Article
Brian, Kathleen M.;
(2012)
“Occasionally heard to be answering voices”: Aural Culture and the Ritual of Psychiatric Audition, 1877--1911
(/isis/citation/CBB001251914/)
Article
Régis Olry;
Duane E. Haines;
(2017)
The Devil Always Experienced Malicious Pleasure in Imposing Himself in Neuropsychiatric Nosology
(/isis/citation/CBB588658266/)
Article
Mauricio V Daker;
(2019)
The theory of symptom complexes, mind and madness
(/isis/citation/CBB264539507/)
Be the first to comment!