Abstract

ABSTRACT In the US, disagreement over the biological basis of “chronic Lyme disease” has resulted in the institutionalization of two standards of care: “mainstream” and “Lyme-literate.” For mainstream physicians, chronic Lyme disease is a “medically unexplained illness” that presents with an abundance of “symptoms” in the absence of diagnostic “signs.” For Lyme-literate physicians, and complementary and alternative medicine practitioners more generally, symptoms alone provide sufficient evidence for medical explanation. Drawing upon ethnographic research among mainstream and Lyme-literate physicians, I suggest that medically unexplained illness is not a biomedical anomaly but an intrinsic feature of biomedicine.

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