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Exhibiting health and medicine as culture Whiteley, Louise; Tybjerg, Karin; Pedersen, Bente Vinge; Bencard, Adam; Arnold, Ken Published in: Public Health Panorama Publication date: 2017 Document version Også kaldet Forlagets PDF Document license: CC BY Citation for published version (APA): Whiteley, L., Tybjerg, K., Pedersen, B. V., Bencard, A., & Arnold, K. (2017). Exhibiting health and medicine as culture. Public Health Panorama, 3(1), 59-68. http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0006/334365/Full- Volume3-Issue1-march-2017.pdf?ua=1 Download date: 25. sep.. 2021 59 Original research EXHIBITING HEALTH AND MEDICINE AS CULTURE Louise Whiteley1, Karin Tybjerg2, Bente Vinge Pedersen2, Adam Bencard1, Ken Arnold3 1 Medical Museion, Department of Public Health, and Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research (CBMR), University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark 2 Medical Museion, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark 3 Medical Museion, Department of Public Health, and Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research (CBMR), University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark and Wellcome Trust, London, England Corresponding author: Louise Whiteley (email: [email protected]) ABSTRACT Introduction: This paper discusses the to display medicine as culture, and draws out Conclusion: There is increasing emphasis on potential role of medical museums in public three of the key strategies they employ. the need for health communication to recognize engagement with health and medicine, people’s multiple, lived cultures. We argue that Results: The three key strategies are: (1) based on the work of Medical Museion at the we should also recognize that medical research medicine is presented through historically University of Copenhagen. Rather than asking and practice is itself a form of culture, and as specific material objects; (2) these objects are whether cultural venues such as museums can such is multiple and historically shifting. This used to explore the processes of research and directly improve the well-being of their visitors, paper demonstrates that museums are an the evolution of practice; and (3) exhibitions we instead focus on how museums should ideal site for doing so, contributing to public are designed to emphasize an implied communicate about health and medicine. engagement with medicine that acknowledges relationship between the objects’ functions multiplicity on both sides. Methods: The paper describes three examples and the visitor’s own body. of exhibitions at Medical Museion that attempt Keywords: MUSEUMS, WHOLE-OF-SOCIETY APPROACH, PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT, CULTURAL SECTOR, MEDICINE AS CULTURE INTRODUCTION Indeed, evidence suggests that health campaigns that fail to take local cultures into account often struggle to WHO, along with the wider fields of public health achieve their goals and can even have negative effects promotion and science communication, has gradually or widen health disparities (4). The question then shifted its focus further out into the cultural arises of how to deal with the fact that we are always landscape. Determinants of health used to be seen communicating in the context of the lived, local as primarily physiological; then as social, economic cultures that shape personal experiences of health and and structural; and more recently cultural contexts medicine (5). Many traditional health communication have entered the stage, creating a “whole-of-society” media demand the selection of a target group that approach (as emphasized in this special issue) (1–3). must be specifically addressed, ideally to influence There are both pragmatic and normative reasons for behaviour. Yet it’s very hard to “hit the right note” this, all entangled with changes in communication for culturally specific audiences, on both superficial media that offer ever-expanding opportunities to be and deep levels (6,7). We would like to suggest that confronted with other ways of life, and for citizens as well as attending better to the receiver’s culture, to play a role in shaping previously impenetrable health communication should also pay attention to the institutions and practices. multiplicity in medical culture itself. ПАНОРАМА ОБЩЕСТВЕННОГО ЗДРАВООХРАНЕНИЯ ТОМ 3 | ВЫПУСК 1 | МАРТ 2017 Г. | 1-140 EXHIBITING HEALTH AND MEDICINE AS CULTURE 60 As a university medical museum with a broad audience, local and global health, health care, and health-care we shift our focus away from the specific lived cultures delivery” (p. 1607). of our visitors, and work on integrating ideas about medicine as culture into the cultural sector. This Our position on medicine as culture should not be statement uses the word “culture” in three ways, which understood as a relativistic, “anti-science” statement we will briefly unpack before proceeding. First, we that aims to undermine scientific authority by refer to museums as part of a broadly defined creative labelling it as socially constructed (11). Rather, we and cultural sector. Second, we refer to the lived, local hope to maximize the value we gain from medical and cultures that museum visitors bring with them – scientific knowledge by recognizing its rich cultural their habits, beliefs and values in relation to health, complexity, and bringing this into the public sphere. medicine and the body.1 Third, and in the tradition of Below, we will consider the medical museum as one science studies, we treat medicine as culture. In other of the places in which this might occur. We do not words, we start from the position that the scientific think this will solve the many pressing, practical and clinical practices of health and medicine are also issues of health communication, particularly in acute cultural, as evidenced by their shared languages, and fast-moving crisis situations or for marginalized education and institutionalization, practices of looking populations. It is also important to acknowledge and categorizing, concepts of knowledge, structures that only some people can and want to step over our of power and so on (8,4). We do not just want to be threshold, and as part of a medical faculty we focus sensitive to the social and cultural context with on the forms of medicine practised and researched which much history of medicine is concerned; we there. The Danish context also undoubtedly frames want to emphasize the specificity of medical cultures our activities, but if we succeed in our aim, this site- themselves, in different periods, laboratories, hospitals, and nation-specific perspective is just one in the more homes and disciplines. By doing so, we hope to create open conversation we hope to engender, and its very a public space where the varied and material cultures specificity can reiterate the contingency of different of medicine can meet lived, local cultures. medical cultures. More conceptually, we would argue that health communication always refers to culture, at least EXHIBITION METHODS implicitly. Health information and research findings never exist in a vacuum; they cannot be fully defined The authors all work at Medical Museion, in the objectively and then transmitted accurately to a blank Department of Public Health at the University of and deficient public (9). It doesn’t make sense to treat Copenhagen. Medical Museion combines a museum lived culture as simply another causal determinant with an interdisciplinary research group, and research of disease, or as a perceptual filter that distorts and practice reciprocally inform each other; we a supposed baseline of rational cognition. Definitions continually experiment with methods for exhibiting of health, experiences of disease and evaluations of and understanding the cultures of health and the benefits and drawbacks of treatment come into medicine in cultural and historical perspectives. We being at the dynamic intersection of science, medical work closely with public health researchers, clinicians culture and forms of living. As Napier et al. (10) write in and biomedical scientists; with scholars from the their Lancet Commission article on culture and health: social sciences and humanities; and with artists and “We believe, therefore, that the perceived distinction other creative practitioners, all of whom are also part between the objectivity of science and the subjectivity of our audience. of culture is itself a social fact (a common perception)... We recommend a broad view of culture that embraces At the heart of our approach are the material objects not only social systems of belief as cultural, but also that fill both our historical collections and the presumptions of objectivity that permeate views of laboratories, hospitals and clinics where medicine is practised today. Material objects always bear markers 1 Neither of these definitions are theoretically driven; they simply help of culture: their design indicates how they were used, to disambiguate our broad use of the word “culture” in relation to this and they often bear the patina of specific use (12) – particular setting. signs of being used in particular places, by particular PUBLIC HEALTH PANORAMA VOLUME 3 | ISSUE 1 | MARCH 2017 | 1-140 EXHIBITING HEALTH AND MEDICINE AS CULTURE 61 people, in particular practices. While science often observations and curatorial insights gathered over presents itself as a unity offering general insights into many years, while acknowledging the methodological nature, its objects demonstrate that the medical and limitations of these data. health sciences are