Limits to Medicine: Medical Nemesis, the Expropriation of Health |
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Page 41
... bureaucratic gobbledegook ; or when suffering , mourning , and healing outside the patient role are labeled a form of deviance . Medical Monopoly Like its clinical counterpart , social inatrogenesis can escalate from an adventitious ...
... bureaucratic gobbledegook ; or when suffering , mourning , and healing outside the patient role are labeled a form of deviance . Medical Monopoly Like its clinical counterpart , social inatrogenesis can escalate from an adventitious ...
Page 100
... bureaucratic term " policy " constitutes the supreme attack on language and reason . 196 He who successfully claims power in an emergency suspends and can destroy rational evaluation . The insistence of the physician on his exclusive ...
... bureaucratic term " policy " constitutes the supreme attack on language and reason . 196 He who successfully claims power in an emergency suspends and can destroy rational evaluation . The insistence of the physician on his exclusive ...
Page 237
... bureaucrats or because they live close to the one large hospital . In rich countries members of different minorities are underprivi- leged , not because , in terms of money per capita , they necessarily get less than their share , 55 ...
... bureaucrats or because they live close to the one large hospital . In rich countries members of different minorities are underprivi- leged , not because , in terms of money per capita , they necessarily get less than their share , 55 ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
The Medicalization of Life | 39 |
Introduction | 127 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Alan Berg American Medical Association autonomous become behavior Bibliography Boyars cancer century chap Chicago clients clinical clinical death 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 Hastings Center 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 London 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 York
References to this book
The Imperative of Health: Public Health and the Regulated Body Deborah Lupton No preview available - 1995 |