Title of article :
Medical theories, science, and the practice of medicine
Author/Authors :
Rachel Lewinsohn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
10
From page :
1261
To page :
1270
Abstract :
Ours is the age of science and technology. The conclusions of modern medical science and theories are derived from experimental research developed since the last century by the life sciences, with the methods of the exact and physical sciences, and the invaluable aid of technology. This paper compares past systems of medicine with our own, and examines the role of science and theory in medical practice, in the remote and recent past and at present. Has medical science and theory in the past been of benefit to medical practice? Has it helped the physician to understand disease? To treat the sick? Finally, the paper looks at a number of uncomfortable questions raised by medical practice in our own time. The widespread rejection of todayʹs medical practice with its flawed doctor–patient relationship, its super-specialization and mechanization, and its incessantly growing reliance on technology, is examined in the light of the prodigious advances of modern medical science and some of its abuses and exorbitant claims, as well as its rejection of the value of past medical systems. Our need is for an integration of the old and the new, in a synthesis that will lead us back to a more human medicine.
Keywords :
medical theories , Science , medical practice , scientific medicine , empirical medicine
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Record number :
599739
Link To Document :
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