Passive Patient Culture in India: Disrespect in Law and Medicine

Passive Patient Culture in India (Routledge Research in Health Law) book cover

Passive Patient Culture in India (Routledge Research in Health Law)

Author(s): Supriya Subramani (Author)

  • Publisher: Routledge
  • Publication Date: March 21, 2025
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 198 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0367655365
  • ISBN-13: 9780367655365

Book Description

In a society shaped by deep inequalities, where healthcare and legal systems often reinforce class, caste, religion, and gender hierarchies, this book offers a powerful examination of patienthood in India. Through its critical approach, it seeks to disrupt binaries―such as universalistic and particularistic values and data versus theory―while decentering normative discourses by foregrounding lived experiences within the context. It offers philosophical and conceptual insights that extend far beyond local variations and contexts, challenging dominant narratives in global discourses on medical decision-making and concepts such as informed consent, autonomy, and respect.

This book critiques the archetype of the “passive patient” entrenched in both medicine and law in India an image that undermines agency, diminishes self-respect, and sustains a culture of disrespect. Chapters of the book unpacks the intersections of power, social categories, and patienthood, exposing how marginalized communities face everyday indignities in healthcare and law. It explores law and medicine’s role in maintaining presumed 'passive patient' archetype, especially through legal judgements and healthcare encounters. This book advocates for reimagining patienthood as centered on self-respect, recognition, and agency, arguing that the “passive patient” is not an isolated phenomenon but an outcome of broader, oppressive structures.

Contributing to robust debates in medical sociology, bioethics, and social justice, this book is essential reading for those interested in the intersections of these fields, along with applied ethics, health services research, and law.

This book is freely available as downloadable Open Access PDFs at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Supriya Subramani’s book is a pioneering attempt to explore [the] dark side of Indian healthcare. The study is enriched by her own experience of everyday indignities from childhood onwards. The book will be of much interest to privileged and underprivileged readers alike. For those who have also been at the receiving end of everyday indignities, it will be a source of strength and inspiration. If you come from the other end, this book will help you to open your eyes to patterns of disrespect that are too often taken for granted."

-Jean Drèze, Development Economist and Social Scientist

"Passive Patient Culture in India is one of the finest works of philosophy that I have read in a long, long time. It is exemplary in the manner in which philosophical analysis and reflection are exercised in service of the marginalised, rather than the sadly more common tendency whereby the marginalised are commodified for the benefit of academic enterprise. Subramani has much to teach social and political philosophers, bioethicists, the legal community, health humanities scholars, those working in development, and health practitioners of all stripes. While the book title begins to locate the communities with whom Subramani laboured in the production of this text, it has important lessons for us all - geography, class, gender and caste notwithstanding."

-Bryan Mukandi, Philosopher

"The title of this book is deceiving. It should in fact be called something like “Respect and Recognition: A New and Urgent Manifesto for an Ailing World.” Because it is a must-read for anyone interested in challenging themselves, their disciplinary norms, and their institutional cultures – to think deeply about the structural inequalities that shape our worlds and work towards overcoming them in any area in which we practice. It should be required reading for all. Subramani’s work has already changed the way I think about the research that I do in history, and the way in which I do it. The introduction alone was breathtaking in its intellectual reach, its connective sinews, and its critical, yet hopeful arguments. This book left me in tears, and yet deeply inspired – to dare to dream about how to do things differently, and to get on with trying."

-Michael A. McDonnell, Historian

About the Author

Supriya Subramani is Lecturer at Sydney Health Ethics, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney. She explores ethics, embodied emotions, and the politics of knowledge. Employing critical philosophical ethnography and a phenomenological approach, she critically examines structural injustice in health, disrespect and othering, the ethics of belonging, and the intersections of paternalism, respect, and agency.

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