Abstract

The relations of power between healthcare-related institutions and the professionals that interact with them are changing. Generally, the institutions are gaining the upper hand. Consequently, the intellectual abilities necessary for professionals to pursue the internal goods of healthcare are changing as well. A concrete case is the struggle over sickness benefits in Sweden, in which the Swedish Social Insurance Agency (SSIA) and physicians are important stakeholders. The SSIA has recently consolidated its power over the sickness certificates that doctors issue for their patients. The result has been a stricter gatekeeping of sickness benefits. In order to combat the inroads made by state institutions into sickness certification, and into the sphere of medical practice, some doctors have developed cunning “techniques” to maximize the chance to have their sickness certificates accepted by the SSIA. This article attempts to demonstrate that cunning intelligence—the ability of the weak to “outsmart” a stronger adversary—plays an important role in the practice of medicine. Cunning intelligence is not merely a defective form of prudence (phronesis), nor is it simply an instance of instrumental reason (techne), but rather an ability that occupies a distinct place among the intellectual abilities generally ascribed to professionals.

Highlights

  • Aristotle’s History of Animals certainly demonstrates his knack for biology

  • Recent observations indicate that members of this species write sickness certificates in a way that appears to comply with the stricter eligibility criteria for sickness benefits, but

  • The so-called insurance medical decision support that was implemented on a national level to help guide doctors in their sickness certification practices, have been hijacked by the Swedish Social Insurance Agency (SSIA) to exert power over the behavior of doctors

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Summary

Introduction

Aristotle’s History of Animals certainly demonstrates his knack for biology. with respect to the quote above, Aristotle was wrong. Keywords Metis · Cunning intelligence · Phronesis · Practical knowledge · Medical practice · Sickness certification

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Conclusion

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