Medicine and CultureMacmillan, 1996 M11 15 - 204 pages A classic comparative study of medicine and national culture, Medicine and Culture shows us that while doctors regard themselves as servants of science, they are often prisoners of custom. |
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Page xvii
... perhaps partly due to the fact that they aren't as afraid of catching the virus in the course of general medical care , and partly due to their less puritanical view of people with a disease transmitted most commonly through sexual ...
... perhaps partly due to the fact that they aren't as afraid of catching the virus in the course of general medical care , and partly due to their less puritanical view of people with a disease transmitted most commonly through sexual ...
Page xviii
... perhaps a sign that the work ethic has never been that strong in Great Britain . ) More recently , American researchers found that American patients diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome had an abnormal blood pressure response when ...
... perhaps a sign that the work ethic has never been that strong in Great Britain . ) More recently , American researchers found that American patients diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome had an abnormal blood pressure response when ...
Page xxiii
... Perhaps values would be of less importance if there were indisputable evidence that all interventions of all physicians were always of clear benefit to all patients . Incompetence and malpractice apart , such an idyllic state of affairs ...
... Perhaps values would be of less importance if there were indisputable evidence that all interventions of all physicians were always of clear benefit to all patients . Incompetence and malpractice apart , such an idyllic state of affairs ...
Page 19
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Page 22
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Contents
Is Medicine International? | 15 |
Culture Bias in Medical Science | 23 |
France Cartesian Thinking and the Terrain | 35 |
West Germany The Lingering Influences of Romanticism | 74 |
Great Britain Economy Empiricism and Keeping the Upper Lip Stiff | 101 |
United States The Virus in the Machine | 124 |
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According to Dr aggressive American doctors American Journal anthroposophic medicine antibiotics believe body breast cancer Britain British doctors British Medical Journal British patient British psychiatrists cause cesarean section clinical trials Comparison considered coronary artery countries CREDOC culture biases cure death digitalis doses drugs England England Journal English English patients European Diagnoses example explained fact France French French doctors French women German germs gynecologists Health Herzinsuffizienz homeopathy hospital Hypertension hysterectomy hysterosalpingogram infections International Journal of Medicine Kneipp Kneipp therapy Lancet less liver low blood pressure lumpectomy mastectomy Médecine Medical Post Medical Practice Monde myomectomy O'Brien Obstetrics operation Paris Patterns of European percent performed physicians placebo practitioners prescribed problems procedures professor psychiatrists risk Science showed side effects social spas spasmophilia specialists surgeons surgery terrain therapy thought treated treatment United University values Virchow virus West German doctors West Germany World wrote York
Popular passages
Page xxiii - ... percent of all contemporary clinical interventions are supported by objective scientific evidence that they do more good than harm. On the other hand, between 40 and 60 percent of all therapeutic benefits can be attributed to a combination of the placebo and Hawthorne effects, two code words for caring and concern, or what most people call "love.