D. North et al., PATIENT RESPONSES TO BENZODIAZEPINE MEDICATION - A TYPOLOGY OF ADAPTIVE REPERTOIRES DEVELOPED BY LONG-TERM USERS, Sociology of health & illness, 17(5), 1995, pp. 632-650
Since the late 1970s there has been a marked decline in the prescribin
g of the benzodiazepines. Yet long-term use of this drug persists desp
ite widespread media condemnation and growing professional concern. Th
e study seeks to illuminate this phenomenon by deploying qualitative m
ethods to investigate the meaning that such medication has for the use
rs themselves and their styles of management. In-depth interviews were
conducted with fifteen community-based users and seven members of a s
elf-help group. From this material a typology was developed that refle
cted the relationship users had formed with their medication. The key
dimensions in this typology were the degree of dependency on the drug,
the perceived level of risk associated with it, and underlying attitu
de. The relationships to the drug reflected in the typology were sugge
stive of a pattern of self-regulation and active management by users,
rather than dominance and control by practitioners. Furthermore, the i
nvestigation indicated that characteristics of the medication regime i
tself - such as type of drug and dose - exert an influence on the attr
ibution of meaning and the place of the drug in users' lives. While a
characterisation of patient subculture has real potential for applicat
ion in clinical practice, there are also implications within medical s
ociology for theories of medicalisation and social control.