Title of article
The ellipsis of prognosis in modern medical thought
Author/Authors
Nicholas A. Christakis، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
15
From page
301
To page
315
Abstract
Contemporary textbooks of internal medicine give scant attention to the prognosis of diseases. Has this always been the case? If not, when and why did prognosis come to be de-emphasized? Using a highly regarded, standard medical textbook initially authored by William Osler, The Principles and Practice of Medicine, I performed qualitative and quantitative content analysis of entries regarding lobar pneumonia in selected editions published between 1892 and 1988, with special attention to the period between 1892 and 1947. I chose lobar pneumonia because it was a leading cause of death throughout this period and because it is recognizable across time, thus making it possible to follow the evolution in clinical thinking about prognosis while holding constant the diagnosis. I argue that two powerful forces converged to lead to the ellipsis of prognosis: (1) the emergence of effective therapy, and (2) a fundamental change in the cognitive basis of medicine. With respect to the former, I show that there is a complementary, inverse relationship between the clinical acts of prognostication and therapy; as one increases in salience in the management of a disease, the other decreases. With respect to the latter, I argue that the particular clinical facts deemed to be important about a patientʹs case have shifted over time, and I explore changes in the clinical and cognitive foundations of physiciansʹ estimation of patientsʹ prognoses—in particular, “symptoms” and “complications.” I conclude that, concurrent with a shift in clinical thought from an individual-based to a diagnosis-based conceptualization of disease, prognosis came to be seen as intrinsic to diagnosis and therapy, and explicit attention to prognosis consequently diminished.
Keywords
prognosis , therapy , Sociology of knowledge , complications , symptoms
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
599249
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