Ambivalent users. Strategic Pharmaceutical Use and Identity Management among ADHD College Students

Journal title SALUTE E SOCIETÀ
Author/s Meika Loe, Leigh Cuttino
Publishing Year 2013 Issue 2012/Suppl. 2EN Language English
Pages 27 P. 111-137 File size 238 KB
DOI 10.3280/SES2012-SU2008EN
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Drawing on interview data, this article examines how college students experience "the medicated self" in the context of ADD/ADHD. We find that many ADHDdiagnosed students taking psychostimulants are ambivalent users, who actively construct how they are shaped by the behavioral effects of medicine. Pharmaceutical enhancement may be perceived by students as necessary in the context of a competitive academic ethic. In this context something akin to Annette Lareau’s concept of concerted cultivation can thrive, as students themselves practice what we call concerted medicalization in an attempt to literally embody the academic ideal. However, while medicine may enable students to manage academic performance and take control of "disordered bodies", many remain uneasy about the extent to which they feel controlled by a drug. In the context of medical ambivalence, ADHD students engage in reflexive identity management and strategic pharmaceutical use to achieve some semblance of self control and self preservation during their college years. As their college education comes to a close, many prepare to return to what they construct as their "authentic", non-medicated selves as they enter the work world.

Keywords: ADHD, identity, medicine, academic ethic, college students.

Meika Loe, Leigh Cuttino, Ambivalent users. Strategic Pharmaceutical Use and Identity Management among ADHD College Students in "SALUTE E SOCIETÀ" Suppl. 2EN/2012, pp 111-137, DOI: 10.3280/SES2012-SU2008EN