Medical Nemesis: The Expropriation of Health |
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Page 6
... professional self - limitation . I will demonstrate that the insistence of the medical guild on its unique qualifications to cure medicine itself is based on an illusion . Professional power is the result of a political delegation of ...
... professional self - limitation . I will demonstrate that the insistence of the medical guild on its unique qualifications to cure medicine itself is based on an illusion . Professional power is the result of a political delegation of ...
Page 103
... professionally killed into a major issue.211 correspond to a professional duty , see Ludwig Edelstein , " The Professional Ethics of the Greek Physician , " Bulletin of the History of Medicine 30 ( September- October 1956 ) : 391–419 ...
... professionally killed into a major issue.211 correspond to a professional duty , see Ludwig Edelstein , " The Professional Ethics of the Greek Physician , " Bulletin of the History of Medicine 30 ( September- October 1956 ) : 391–419 ...
Page 249
... professional monopoly in assigning the sick - role , it cannot control hidden health hierarchies that multiply patients.80 The medical clergy can be controlled only if the law is used to restrict and disestablish its monopoly on ...
... professional monopoly in assigning the sick - role , it cannot control hidden health hierarchies that multiply patients.80 The medical clergy can be controlled only if the law is used to restrict and disestablish its monopoly on ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
The Medicalization of Life | 39 |
Specific Counterproductivity | 211 |
Copyright | |
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Alan Berg American Medical Association autonomous become behavior Bibliography bureaucratic cancer century chap Chicago chloramphenicol clients clinical condition consumer contemporary cost countries Cuernavaca culture damage dance death Degradation Ceremonies dependence developed deviance diagnosis doctor drug dying economic effective engineering England Journal environment Erwin H ethical experience function Geschichte healer healing health levels Health Service History hospital human iatrogenic iatrogenic disease illness increased individual industrial institutions International intervention Ivan Illich Journal of Medicine kind limits literature modern moral mort myth National Health Service nature nemesis nocebo nosology organization pain Pan-American Health Organization Paris patient percent pharmaceutical physicians placebo political poor population prescribed prescription Press production professional recognized René Dubos Report ritual role Science scientific sector sick side-effects social iatrogenesis society Sociology specific Stuttgart suffering survival technical therapeutic therapy tion treatment turned United Univ World Health Organization York