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 30
... humans to the risk . The authors show that it is neither appropriate nor good public - health practice to demand human epidemiological evidence before stopping exposure . The argument against ionizing radiation from nuclear In 1971 ...
... humans to the risk . The authors show that it is neither appropriate nor good public - health practice to demand human epidemiological evidence before stopping exposure . The argument against ionizing radiation from nuclear In 1971 ...
Page 267
... human action . Common to all ethics is the assumption that the human act is performed within the human condition . Since the various ethical systems assumed , tacitly or explicitly , that this human condition was more or less given ...
... human action . Common to all ethics is the assumption that the human act is performed within the human condition . Since the various ethical systems assumed , tacitly or explicitly , that this human condition was more or less given ...
Page 268
... human act but also into the human attitude towards the framework in which a person acts . If this action is to remain human after the framework has been deprived of its sacred character , it needs a recognized ethical foundation within ...
... human act but also into the human attitude towards the framework in which a person acts . If this action is to remain human after the framework has been deprived of its sacred character , it needs a recognized ethical foundation within ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
The Medicalization of Life | 39 |
Introduction | 127 |
Copyright | |
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action activities American Association authority became become behavior belief body century civilization claim clinical common condition consumer cost countries created critical Cuernavaca culture damage deal death demand depend determine developed diagnosis disease doctor drug dying economic effective engineering England environment equal experience function gives healing History hospital human iatrogenesis increased individual industrial institutions intensity International intervention John Journal kind language learned less limits literature live major means measure medicine mortality nature organization pain Paris patient percent performance physician political poor population practice present Press production profession professional progress recognized Report responsible result role Science scientific shows sick social society specific suffering technical therapy tion traditional treatment turned United Univ University York