Medical Nemesis: The Expropriation of Health |
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Page 11
... industrial society . Only people who have recovered the ability for mutual self - care by the application of contemporary techno- logy will be ready to limit the industrial mode of production in other major areas as well . A ...
... industrial society . Only people who have recovered the ability for mutual self - care by the application of contemporary techno- logy will be ready to limit the industrial mode of production in other major areas as well . A ...
Page 61
... INDUSTRIALIZED SOCIETY THE HE medicalization of life is but one aspect of the destructive dominance of industry in our society . Over - medicalization is a particularly painful example of frustrating over - production . The danger of ...
... INDUSTRIALIZED SOCIETY THE HE medicalization of life is but one aspect of the destructive dominance of industry in our society . Over - medicalization is a particularly painful example of frustrating over - production . The danger of ...
Page 145
... industrial society . KUTSCHER , Austin H. Jr. and KUTSCHER , Austin H. A bibliography of books on death , bereavement , loss and grief : 1935-1968 . New York , Health Sciences Publishing Corp. 1969 . EUTHANASIA EDUCATIONAL FUND ...
... industrial society . KUTSCHER , Austin H. Jr. and KUTSCHER , Austin H. A bibliography of books on death , bereavement , loss and grief : 1935-1968 . New York , Health Sciences Publishing Corp. 1969 . EUTHANASIA EDUCATIONAL FUND ...
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