DEFINITION 1.1. Empowerment. – The process by which individuals and groups act to gain control over their lives and thus gain greater control over decisions and actions affecting their health in the context of changing social and political environments. Self-esteem is thus strengthened, critical thinking, decision-making and action capacity are promoted. Even people with few abilities or in precarious situations are considered to have strengths and resources. This process cannot be produced, only fostered.
It was at this very moment that the cornerstones were laid for a new type of exchange based on informal and formal practices between patients. The organizational model that emerged from this was to be extended to other groups, such as drug users in the 1950s and people living with HIV in the 1980s. This phenomenon was then transposed into self-help and self-empowerment movements of user groups in several other addiction pathologies (for example, alcohol in 1935, drugs in 1953, eating disorders or compulsive gambling behavior). This type of interaction, based on mutual aid, information sharing between patients, peer training and developing a global approach to the individual, has gradually challenged and then upset the pyramid of medical knowledge and power alone as a source of healing and disease management. It has also made it possible to meet patients at the very site of their addictions.
The organization of this movement has been formalized according to already operational models, such as those of learned societies or large charitable organizations. This movement thus took this form while, paradoxically, throughout the 20th century, medicine became institutionalized, raising health as a primary value in society in large part thanks to technological discoveries that supported the medical approach, affirming technicality as the spearhead of modern medicine. This institutionalization is accompanied by the displacement of knowledge and care practice from the family sphere to the group and societal spheres, a process which, amplified by societal transformations, sees the development of women’s work taking them away from the family sphere. In this redistribution of knowledge, roles and powers, resorting to a “family doctor” and hospital services will become the norm, giving doctors and the medical institution the possibility of seeing themselves higher in the hierarchy because they are able to defy pain and death (Foucault 1963).
In this process at work, the women, ancestral holders of a “care-taking” inherited from one family member to another, used to practice bona famae (reputable) remedies, occasionally calling on outside practitioners (binders, healers, etc.) to intervene most often in the final stages of the disease during which the prognosis proved fatal and these forms of knowledge were lost. To conclude on the elements leading to a shift in the distribution of care knowledge, it is necessary to highlight: (1) the death of family members in specialized institutions, first in the hospital where the majority of elderly people died during the 20th century, then to dedicated institutions when signs of old age appeared; (2) the appearance of social protection systems – driven by the economic development of our societies – which, although different from one country to another, provide social added value replacing support cells at the family level.
Economic developments also penetrate the world of healthcare, as the pharmaceutical industry developed and grew throughout the century to become part of the international healthcare system by developing global pharmaceutical trusts whose missions are research and marketing of medicines.
In reaction to this medicine, which is carried and dominated by techniques and technologies, both in the care and in the organization of care, a movement of humanization emerges as a compensation of the dominant medical model with the appearance of listening and accompaniment techniques during the 1970s.
Health professionals are organizing themselves to intervene in this trend, first of all outside the institutional framework that protects these new approaches. Not everything concerning patient information and education has yet been translated into international (WHO 1986) recommendations. At the societal level, new public health policies are needed. The increase in the number of people living with chronic diseases raises the question of the involvement of the patient in the management of his or her treatment. Beneficial effects have been recognized by studies. This involvement improves adherence to treatment in multiple pathologies, and doctors are therefore seeking to develop tools to increase it. This transformation of patient care emphasizes the need not only to inform but also to educate the patient in order to be as close as possible to a so-called “informed consent”. This notion of consent initially emerged for research during the Second World War and was the first time that the Nazi regime began experimenting in this field and questioned the behavior of medical doctors who put forward the concept of bioethics. In the course of this process, the patient then began to demand, beyond mere information, a sharing of the decisions that would be taken thanks to free and enlightened information and the right to self-determination.
However, it was during the 1980s that an upheaval was to take place in the attempt to rebalance knowledge and medical power in the context of relationships with patients and populations. It is the result of the emergence of a disease against which, at first, medicine remained powerless: HIV/AIDS. The patient-stakeholder relationship then established itself during the last two decades of the 20th century. This movement added a new element to those previously described and driven by the movement or movements of patients (mutual aid, information and training): the use of an activism that claims to play the role of reformer within a changing society – the information society and then the knowledge society, in the 21st century.
The socialization of action in the field of health then became a fact of society. The approach to health was profoundly modified by the action of these new patients who, as early as 1983, set out new demands through the Denver Principles. They then expressed the need for their participation in everything that concerned them.
At the heart of this change is the desire of patients to become “stakeholders in their own health”; a social reform action explained in 1989 at the World Conference on HIV/AIDS (Canada) by the founding president of the French association AIDES association, Daniel Defert. This period saw the emergence of new types of associations with innovative functions.
These associations were created, from the 1990s on, on inter-associative collectives3. These forces and sources of collective knowledge relied on the media to disseminate their message in public opinion and make visible the system’s inability to deal with situations. As a result of this shock, patients, through these associations, demanded to participate fully in the organizational processes and in the orientation choices of public health policies. The fact that young people die without the cause being war creates a shock wave among Western populations. Associations are becoming aware of this and are quickly learning to use public opinion to influence political decisions.
The associative movement is then profoundly modified, in its structures and by being partly composed of patients and relatives. The latter act from then on to assert their status as reformers of the health system. They provide a generalized awareness of the fact that the sick individual – as the first person concerned – can become a stakeholder in his or her own health; the idea that one holds knowledge that one can express gradually emerges. This shift questions and upsets the dominance of medical knowledge and powers as the only sources of healing and management of illness. This approach is beginning to appear relevant, even necessary, for the management of chronically ill patients. Indeed, in this field, multiple studies prove the limits of an increasingly technical and efficient medicine in the treatment of the acute phases of diseases and other accidents of life. Thus, the notions of compliance – the ability of the patient to follow medical prescriptions – or more precisely of non-observance are opposed to the solutions, however, which are still largely topical and which propose increasingly specialized medicine, defining the individual according to a mechanistic philosophy. Patients demand that the choices of research, prescription