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The Biomedical Model And Aids

Decent Essays

And the Band Played On was a film created by HBO on the Acquired Immunodeficiency Virus (AIDS) epidemic in the 1980s, and the political and social debate behind AIDS (Spelling, Vincent, & Spottiswoode, 1993). The papers aim is on how the film draws the assumptions of the biomedical model to influence the audience that its accounts of the AIDS epidemic is true, such as scientism and positivism, doctrine of specific etiology, technological imperative, and objectivity versus subjectivity. This paper will first discuss the criticism behind the biomedical model and AIDS, relating to the film. Last, the paper will draw on points within the thesis of how the biomedical models assumptions made AIDS true. Many people criticize the biomedical model in relation to AIDS. First, we cannot state that AIDS is real, because nothing is “social and/or culture free” since society has created every idea (Whelan, 2015b); this means that AIDS must be a social construction. Social construction is that human beings make the world they live in (Whelan, 2015b). The people who developed knowledge and science about AIDS has to decide what was relevant and non-relevant, based on their own ideas and personal biases. This may lead to misinterpretation of the information to favor a particular direction in society (Whelan, 2015a). There is also a social construction in the film that AIDS is a homosexual disease; thus, making homosexuality something not natural or healthy because it deviates from normal

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