Psychopharmaceuticals in India

Author:   Stefan Ecks (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780415590396


Pages:   208
Publication Date:   01 November 2011
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Psychopharmaceuticals in India


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Overview

This book analyses two specific processes of globalization that have had an impact on the changing nature of doctor-patient encounters in India. One is the immense and successful growth of the global market in antidepressants over recent years, to the effect scholars speak of an antidepressant era . The other process is the rising Indian generics industry, which is to become the world largest manufacturer of generic medications by volume. This expansion was made possible by the Indian patent regime that was in place from 1972 to 2005, which allowed thousands of small, medium, and large companies to reverse-engineer and sell drugs that were patent-protected in European and North American countries. Indian manufacturers did not only recapture from multinational companies the majority share of the domestic pharmaceuticals market, but they also to become the new pharmacy of the world through drug exports. Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in India, this book shows how the prescription habits of Indian allopathic practitioners (psychiatrists, general physicians, and untrained quacks ) have changed through the easy availability of generic psychopharmaceuticals. The author also analyses how both popular and professional perceptions of mind, body, and psychological distress are being transformed by pharmaceutical marketing. Additionally, this book demonstrates how regulatory and bioethical regimes in both India and beyond contribute both to the rise of Indian generic manufacturers and the rise of psychopharmaceutical uses. Exploring in detail this reverse globalization process of India's psychopharmaceuticals industry and their crossings with other streams of global forces, this book questions the common center-periphery relationship of Western thinking and links macrosocial factors with the level of experience of different social actors, thus providing a unique contribution to current debates in the medical anthropology, medical sociology, transcultural psychiatry and Asia Studies.

Full Product Details

Author:   Stefan Ecks (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
ISBN:  

9780415590396


ISBN 10:   0415590396
Pages:   208
Publication Date:   01 November 2011
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Is India on Prozac? 2. Global capitalism and psychopharmaceuticals: A polyspherical history 3. Redefining India's 'culture-bound syndromes' in the age of antidepressants 4. Evanescent evidence, or: Is depression rising in India? 5. Unseen drug dissemination: rethinking the treatment gap 6. When psychotropics start to float 7. Global corporate citizenship : benevolence or marketing manoeuvre? 8. Contestations of a global monoculture true happiness 9. Conclusion

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Author Information

Stefan Ecks is Director of the Anthropology of Health & Illness Programme and a Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh, UK. He has carried out ethnographic fieldwork on health and medicine in India since 1999, focusing on postcolonial notions of body, health and healing. From 2006 to 2009, he was Co-Investigator in the ESRC/DFID-funded project Tracing Pharmaceuticals in South Asia that studies the trajectories of key drugs through production, distribution, prescription and consumption in India and Nepal.

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