Stocking up on Fish Mox: a Systematic Analysis of Cultural Narratives about Self-medicating in Online Forums

AIMS Public Health
Rebecca Howes-Mischel

Abstract

This study is a systematic review of cultural narratives that drive American belief in the value and efficacy of stocking up on fish antibiotics for human consumption. Popularized by "doomsday prepper" forums and survivalist medical professionals' online videos, this narrative suggests that in some scenarios humans may benefit from such treatments-even as they note its contraindication to mainstream public health advice. Discussions in crowd-sourcing forums however, reveal that in practice Americans are using them as a form of home remedy to treat routine infections without missing work or to make up for gaps in insurance coverage. This article argues for greater attention to what makes it plausible and reasonable to treat human conditions with animal medications. It suggests that public health initiatives should address such decisions as emerging from a rational analysis of social and economic conditions rather than dismissing such practices as dangerous to population and individual health outcomes. As social scientists of medicine have long argued, collective narratives about health and medicine illustrate deeply the broader contexts in which communities understand and experience bodily state and shape how communities interac...Continue Reading

References

Jan 10, 2002·Health Education Research·M White, S M Dorman
May 18, 2006·Health Services Research·M Kate BundorfLaurence C Baker
May 30, 2017·International Journal of Medical Informatics·Arabella ScantleburyBec Hanley

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Citations

May 11, 2019·Clinical Infectious Diseases : an Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America·Eric F Egelund, Anthony M Casapao

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