Abstract

Risk and uncertainty can destabilise and reconstruct the relationships between medicine, policy and publics. Through semi-structured interviews with medical staff following the Fukushima 3.11 Disaster, this paper demonstrates the way in which disruption (caused by disaster), coupled with uncertainty (in this case, around radiation risk) can serve to transform medical practices. After Fukushima, a deficit in publicly-trusted approaches to disaster management meant that the role and status of key medical professionals was transformed. This reorganisation of medical work included the development of new forms of expertise, the stretching of expertise beyond previously well-defined professional boundaries, and shifts in the way in which medical professionals understand and interact with publics. These changes signified the rise of new relationships between the medical workers and their community, as well as adjustments in what were regarded as the boundaries of medical work. Given both the ubiquitous threat of disasters and calls for increased engagement between the medicine and the public, this case study provides insight into the forms which such engagements can take, especially when bound by conditions of uncertainty. The paper draws upon the theoretical literature around the impact of uncertainty on policy, and combines this with medical sociological literature on the nature of medical expertise. The paper examines the shifting of medical expertise towards mode 2 forms, and evidences the impact of a democratised science of risk on the roles and functions of medical practice.

Highlights

  • This study investigates the impact of the Fukushima 3.11 Disaster on the expertise and evidence-generating practices of medical professionals in a directly-affected region

  • Through semi-structured interviews with medical staff following the Fukushima 3.11 Disaster, this paper demonstrates the way in which disruption, coupled with uncertainty can serve to transform medical practices

  • This case study articulates the changes in medical expertise and practice that occur at the microsociological level under conditions of risk and uncertainty precipitated by disaster

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Summary

Introduction

This study investigates the impact of the Fukushima 3.11 Disaster on the expertise and evidence-generating practices of medical professionals in a directly-affected region. The government was perceived by the general public to have misrepresented risk, miscommunicated the extent of exposure, and mismanaged public safety during the acute phase of the disaster (Figueroa, 2013; Miller, 2016). Under these conditions, as this paper will demonstrate, medical doctors in the region began to undertake the collection and communication of evidence around local radiation exposure. One of the ways in which medical practices changed following the disaster was in the rise of new evidence-generating practices – collecting data to demonstrate and articulate rates of radiation exposure – used to understand the risk caused by radiation release.The case study demonstrates the way in which risk and uncertainty underpin changes in medical expertise and practice following a primarily non-medical disaster

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