Alcoholism, a contagious disease. A contribution towards an anthropological definition of contagion. NLM AIDSLINE Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1997. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.

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Alcoholism, a contagious disease. A contribution towards an anthropological definition of contagion.

Cult Med Psychiatry. 1996 Dec;20(4):473-87. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE MED/97144153
Fainzang S; National Institute of Health and Medical Research, INSERM, Paris.


Abstract: The goal of this article is to show, from the discourses of drinkers' spouses, members of a "cured-drinkers" movement in France very different from the AA, what the idea of the contagious character of alcoholism means in the subjects' representations and by extension, what the idea of contagion may contain when seen from an anthropological perspective. This work rests on the observation that many people consider that their spouse's alcoholism makes them sick, and tend to identify with the sick person by finding effects of alcoholism on their own bodies. The notion of contagion qualifies here the perception of the impact of the other's sickness on oneself, by physical and social proximity to the drinker, insofar as the conditions for contagion to be possible include not only sharing the same physical (domestic) space, but also the existence of a social bond.
Keywords: *Alcoholism/PSYCHOLOGY *Anthropology, Cultural *Co-Dependency (Psychology) *Sick Role *Spouses/PSYCHOLOGYKWDalcoholism/psychologyKWDanthropology,culturalKWDco-dependency(psychology)KWDsickroleKWDspouses/psychology
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Copyright © 1997 - National Library of Medicine. Reproduced under license with the National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD.

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