The Art of Medicine

The Art of Medicine

Author: Herbert Ho Ping Kong

Publisher: ECW Press

Published: 2014-07-01

Total Pages: 249

ISBN-13: 1770905669

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A renowned diagnostician shares stories of his patients and explores the importance of the human factor in medicine. In The Art of Medicine, Toronto Western Hospital’s internist Dr. Herbert Ho Ping Kong draws on his vast dossier of personal cases and five decades as a clinician to examine the core principles of a patient-centered approach to diagnosis and treatment. While HPK, as he is fondly known, recognizes and applauds the many invaluable innovations in medical technology, he makes the point that as disease and its management grow increasingly complex, physicians must learn to develop an arsenal of more basic skills, actively using the arts of seeing, hearing, palpation, empathy, and advocacy to provide a more humane and holistic form of care. Aimed at medical practitioners, aspiring doctors, or anyone interested in health and medicine, this book also contains interviews with more than a dozen of HPK’s patients, as well as short essays that explore the thinking of his professional colleagues on the art of medicine.


The Limits of Medicine

The Limits of Medicine

Author: Edward S. Golub

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 1997-05

Total Pages: 276

ISBN-13: 9780226302072

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Edward Golub, distinguished researcher and former professor of immunology, shows that major advances in medicine are caused by changes in the way scientists describe disease. Bleeding, sweating, and other treatments we consider barbaric were standard treatments for centuries because they conformed to a conception of disease shared by patients and doctors. Scientific breakthroughs in the understanding of disease in the nineteenth century transformed treatment and the goals of medicine. Golub argues that the ongoing revolution in molecular genetics has opened the door to the "biology of complexity," again transforming our view of disease. This thought-provoking, timely book reveals a crucial but overlooked role of science in medicine, and offers a new vision for the goals of both science and medicine as we enter the twenty-first century.


The Limits of Medical Paternalism

The Limits of Medical Paternalism

Author: Heta Häyry

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2002-02-07

Total Pages: 219

ISBN-13: 113492383X

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The Limits of Medical Paternalism defines and morally assesses paternalistic interventions, especially in the context of modern medicine and health care, particular emphasis is given to the analysis of the conceptual background of the paternalism issue. In this book an anti-paternalistic view is presented and defended.


What Kind of Life?

What Kind of Life?

Author: Daniel Callahan

Publisher: Georgetown University Press

Published: 1995-02-01

Total Pages: 328

ISBN-13: 9781589018785

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A provocative call to rethink America's values in health care.


Limits to Medicine

Limits to Medicine

Author: Ivan Illich

Publisher: Marion Boyars

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 9780714529936

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The medical establishment has become a major threat to health, says Ivan Illich. He outlines the causes of iatrogenic diseases.


Last Resort

Last Resort

Author: Jack D. Pressman

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2002-08-08

Total Pages: 582

ISBN-13: 9780521524599

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This book, first published in 1998, revisits the period in the 1940s and 1950s when many Americans were operated on for mental illness.


Setting Limits

Setting Limits

Author: Daniel Callahan

Publisher: Georgetown University Press

Published: 1995-03-01

Total Pages: 280

ISBN-13: 9781589018679

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A provocative call to rethink America's values in health care.


To Fix Or To Heal

To Fix Or To Heal

Author: Joseph E. Davis

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2016-02-26

Total Pages: 343

ISBN-13: 1479878243

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Do doctors fix patients? Or do they heal them? For all of modern medicine’s many successes, discontent with the quality of patient care has combined with a host of new developments, from aging populations to the resurgence of infectious diseases, which challenge medicine’s overreliance on narrowly mechanistic and technical methods of explanation and intervention, or “fixing’ patients. The need for a better balance, for more humane “healing” rationales and practices that attend to the social and environmental aspects of health and illness and the experiencing person, is more urgent than ever. Yet, in public health and bioethics, the fields best positioned to offer countervailing values and orientations, the dominant approaches largely extend and reinforce the reductionism and individualism of biomedicine. The collected essays in To Fix or To Heal do more than document the persistence of reductionist approaches and the attendant extension of medicalization to more and more aspects of our lives. The contributors also shed valuable light on why reductionism has persisted and why more holistic models, incorporating social and environmental factors, have gained so little traction. The contributors examine the moral appeal of reductionism, the larger rationalist dream of technological mastery, the growing valuation of health, and the enshrining of individual responsibility as the seemingly non-coercive means of intervention and control. This paradigm-challenging volume advances new lines of criticism of our dominant medical regime, even while proposing ways of bringing medical practice, bioethics, and public health more closely into line with their original goals. Precisely because of the centrality of the biomedical approach to our society, the contributors argue, challenging the reductionist model and its ever-widening effects is perhaps the best way to press for a much-needed renewal of our ethical and political discourse.


Medical Nihilism

Medical Nihilism

Author: Jacob Stegenga

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13: 0198747047

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Medical nihilism is the view that we should have little confidence in the effectiveness of medical interventions. Jacob Stegenga argues persuasively that this is how we should see modern medicine, and suggests that medical research must be modified, clinical practice should be less aggressive, and regulatory standards should be enhanced.