December 1985
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3 Reads
Social Science & Medicine
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December 1985
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3 Reads
Social Science & Medicine
March 1985
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44 Reads
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51 Citations
Journal of Medicine and Philosophy
Reflections about the role of human choice in determining personal health occur in the writings of practitioners and laymen throughout history. The Greek and Roman writers emphasized the effect of life's activities. During the Middle Ages and Renaisance, disease continued to be seen as a consequence of disorder of the bodily humors, which were under the individual's control. The rise of the paternalistic national regimes in Europe produced the view that society had the responsibility to maintain health. Jacksonian egalitarianism led to a reaction against the agressive therapies of established professional experts, a view furthered by the Thomsonian belief that people should wrest control of their health away from orthodox physicians. Among the twentieth century reactions was the movement to urge people to have doctors evaluate laypersons' health. By the 1970s a movement emerged emphasizing again personal responsibility, which, in turn, produced a concern that this was merely “victim-blaming”. Views on the role of lay people in determining personal health are heavily influenced by prevailing social, political, and moral climates.
January 1985
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2 Reads
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3 Citations
The struggle to help critically ill patients has challenged and troubled physicians throughout history. This essay examines three periods in which illuminating discussions of this occur — the Hippocratic era of Greek medicine (5th–3rd century B.C.), American medicine of the nineteenth, and the twentieth centuries.
October 1984
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3 Reads
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1 Citation
BioScience
... The combination of limited budgets and changing patterns of disease seemingly invites a particular question: what role (if any) should we assign to personal responsibility when we decide which patients (or which diseases) to prioritize (Golan 2010;Leichter 2003;Minkler 1999;Reiser 1985;Sharkey and Gillam 2010;H. Schmidt 2009)? ...
March 1985
Journal of Medicine and Philosophy