Medical Nemesis: The Expropriation of Health"The medical establishment has become a major threat to health. The disabling impact of professional control over medicine has reached the proportions of an epidemic. Iatrogenesis, the name for this new epidemic, comes from iatros, the Greek word for physician, and genesis, meaning origin. Discussion of the disease of medical progress has moved up on the agendas of medical conferences, researchers concentrate on the sick-making powers of diagnosis and therapy, and reports on paradoxical damage caused by cures for sickness take up increasing space in medical dope-sheets [...] The public has been alerted to the perplexity and uncertainty of the best among its hygienic caretakers [...] This book argues that panic is out of place. Thoughtful public discussion of the iatrogenic pandemic, beginning with an insistence upon demystification of all medical matters, will not be dangerous to the commonweal."-- from Introduction. |
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Page 44
... healer . To defuse the issue and to protect their reputation , some physicians insist on the obvious : namely , that medicine cannot be practiced without the iatrogenic creation of disease . Medicine al- ways creates illness as a social ...
... healer . To defuse the issue and to protect their reputation , some physicians insist on the obvious : namely , that medicine cannot be practiced without the iatrogenic creation of disease . Medicine al- ways creates illness as a social ...
Page 107
... healer or just anodyne . Magic or healing through ceremonies is clearly one of the important traditional functions of medicine.223 In 221 H. G. Mather et al . , “ Acute Myocardial Infarction : Home and Hospital Treatment , " British ...
... healer or just anodyne . Magic or healing through ceremonies is clearly one of the important traditional functions of medicine.223 In 221 H. G. Mather et al . , “ Acute Myocardial Infarction : Home and Hospital Treatment , " British ...
Page 146
... healer , pain assumed the role of a step towards the restoration of health . Where the doctor could not heal , he felt no qualms about telling his patient to use analgesics and thus moderate inevitable suffering . Like Oliver Wendell ...
... healer , pain assumed the role of a step towards the restoration of health . Where the doctor could not heal , he felt no qualms about telling his patient to use analgesics and thus moderate inevitable suffering . Like Oliver Wendell ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
The Medicalization of Life | 39 |
Introduction | 127 |
Copyright | |
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Alan Berg American Medical Association autonomous become behavior Bibliography cancer century chap Chicago clients clinical clinical death condition consumer contemporary cost countries Cuernavaca culture damage dance depend developed deviance diagnosis doctor drug dying economic effective engineering England Journal environment Erwin H ethical experience function Geschichte healer healing health levels Health Service hospital human iatrogenesis iatrogenic iatrogenic disease illness increased individual industrial society institutions International intervention Ivan Illich Journal of Medicine kind limits literature modern monopoly mort mortality myth National National Health Service nemesis nocebo organization pain Pan-American Health Organization Paris patient percent physician placebo political poor population prescription Press production profession professional recognized responsible result ritual role Science scientific sector sick side-effects siècle Siegfried Giedion social iatrogenesis Sociology specific Stuttgart suffering survival technical therapeutic therapy tion tonsillectomy traditional treatment turned Univ World Health Organization York