Medical Nemesis: The Expropriation of Health |
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Page 24
... disease . 34 Doctor - inflicted pain and infirmity have always been a part of medical practice . 35 Professional ... disease , in : New England Journal of Medicine , 272 , 1965 , pp . 92-95 . For the physician accustomed to dealing only ...
... disease . 34 Doctor - inflicted pain and infirmity have always been a part of medical practice . 35 Professional ... disease , in : New England Journal of Medicine , 272 , 1965 , pp . 92-95 . For the physician accustomed to dealing only ...
Page 82
... disease ; the impact of stress on populations rather than the impact of specific agents on indi- viduals ; the relationship of the human niche in the cosmos to the species with which it has evolved rather than the relationship between ...
... disease ; the impact of stress on populations rather than the impact of specific agents on indi- viduals ; the relationship of the human niche in the cosmos to the species with which it has evolved rather than the relationship between ...
Page 114
... diseases . The clinical approach to sickness gave birth to a new language which spoke about diseases from the bedside , and to a hospital reorganized by disease for the exhibition of diseases to students . The hospital , which at the ...
... diseases . The clinical approach to sickness gave birth to a new language which spoke about diseases from the bedside , and to a hospital reorganized by disease for the exhibition of diseases to students . The hospital , which at the ...
Contents
PREFACE | 9 |
THE EPIDEMIC OF MODERN MEDICINE | 15 |
THE MEDICALIZATION OF LIFE | 31 |
Copyright | |
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19th century ability American autonomous became become behaviour bibliography bodily pain cancer CIDOC clinical clinical death concept condition consumer contemporary cope cost Cuernavaca culture Dance of Death Danse Macabre decline dependence Deschooling Society deutschen deviance diagnosis disease doctors drugs dying effective engineering England Journal environment experience French Revolution function green revolution Hastings Center healing health services health-denying hospital human iatrogenesis iatrogenic illness increase increasingly institutions Ivan Illich Journal of Medicine kind limits macabre major medical civilization medical intervention Medical Nemesis medical profession modern medicine morbidity mort mortality mycotoxins myocardial infarction myth National Health Service natural death organization over-industrialized pain-killing Paris patient physician political population Press production professional progress recognized responsible result ritual role scientific self-care sickness social iatrogenesis suffering survival symptom technical therapeutic therapy tion treatment turned Univ Verlag York