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Medicine and Care of the Dying Milton J. Lewis (Professor of Public Health, Professor of Public Health, University of Sydney)

Medicine and Care of the Dying By Milton J. Lewis (Professor of Public Health, Professor of Public Health, University of Sydney)

Medicine and Care of the Dying by Milton J. Lewis (Professor of Public Health, Professor of Public Health, University of Sydney)


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Summary

Examines the relationship between medicine's approach to care of the terminally ill and the medical, social, political, economic and cultural context in the English-speaking world. This book is of interest to palliative care practitioners, and health care professionals with an interest in end-of-life care.

Medicine and Care of the Dying Summary

Medicine and Care of the Dying: A Modern History by Milton J. Lewis (Professor of Public Health, Professor of Public Health, University of Sydney)

There is a growing conflict in medicine between the research imperative, with its implicit goal of overcoming death itself, and the re-emergent clinical imperative to treat death as a part of life, and to make the process of dying as tolerable as possible. Central to this conflict is the rise of scientific medicine and the decline of religious and associated discourses. Many of the Anglo Saxon countries are also marked by a moral and religious pluralism which breeds controversy over bioethical issues such as euthanasia. It seems that modern medicine has put the cure of bodies before the care of persons. Some scholars attribute this to a metaphysical heritage of dualism and reductionism. This heritage has become problematic in the modern age where waning belief in a divine order leaves the individual self as the bearer of meaning. At the same time, knowledge about nature and society has been increasing at such an accelerated pace, it has become even more difficult to develop a unified secular worldview. When the dying self contemplates its own disintegration in this context, the search for meaning may rest heavy indeed Chapters one and two address these larger issues. Chapter three focuses on medicine's approach to cancer as a prime example of the strengths and weaknesses of the research imperative. Chapter four looks at the diffusion of the theory and practice of palliative care throughout the Anglo Saxon world. The fifth chapter discusses the development of effective pain control, essential to palliative care and one of modern medicine's unsung triumphs. The sixth chapter addresses the changing meaning of euthanasia in Western history in the past century, as it transitioned from a philosophical position to a widely-debated policy proposal. This book is for palliative care practitioners, and all health care professionals with an interest in end-of-life care. It is also for students in palliative care and the history of medicine, and for anyone interested in the history of this intriguing field.

Medicine and Care of the Dying Reviews

This work is extremely well documented and covers the development of hospice programs in five Anglo-American countries in such detail that it can serve as a reference on the socioeconomic history of end-of-life, palliative medicine in the English-speaking world. * Doody's Notes *

Table of Contents

1. The Religious and the Medical ; 2. The Rise of Modern Medicine ; 3. Cancer and Medicine in Historical Perspective ; 4. Development of Palliative Care Services ; 5. Development of Pain Control ; 6. Medicine and Euthanasia ; 7. Observations and Conclusions

Additional information

GOR010491178
9780195175486
0195175484
Medicine and Care of the Dying: A Modern History by Milton J. Lewis (Professor of Public Health, Professor of Public Health, University of Sydney)
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2006-10-26
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Medicine and Care of the Dying