Abstract
In this chapter I explicate and evaluate the concept of medical error.
Unlike standard philosophical approaches to analyzing medical phenom-
ena in the abstract, I instead address medical error specifi cally within the
context of an embodied social world. I illustrate how, as a deeply contex-
tual concept, medical error is inextricably tied to the social conditions—
and concrete, powerful interests—of the particulars in which it is found.
I begin with an analysis that demonstrates the relational quality of medi-
cal error, as a functional, outcome-oriented concept, evaluating the origin
and context of the term’s emergence, and connecting it to a similarly
contextual concept, “standard of care.” I move on to note the concern-
ing implications of medical error identifi cation and measurement when
viewed through an intersectional standpoint. To do so, I discuss what
intersectional approaches can help reveal about our contemporary social
world of medicine and public health. Intersectional approaches, as I will
explain, focus on how intersections of social identity can unmask social
structures that negatively impact groups and individuals. It appears, as
I will suggest, that disparities in social goods (e.g., social standing, edu-
cation, wealth) complicate our identification of medical error, itself, and
compound concerns of equity and access to medical goods for those who
have diminished expectations for health.