Sickness and healing : an anthropological perspective / Robert A. Hahn.
Material type: TextPublisher: New Haven : Yale University Press, [1995]Copyright date: ©1995Description: viii, 327 pages ; 25 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0300068719
- 9780300068719
- 0300060882
- 9780300060881
- 306.461 20
- GN296 .H35 1995
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | North Campus North Campus Main Collection | 306.461 SIC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A152055B |
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306.461 SEC Second opinion : an introduction to health sociology / | 306.461 SEC Second opinion : an introduction to health sociology / | 306.461 SHE Sociology and health care : an introduction for nurses, midwives and allied health professionals / | 306.461 SIC Sickness and healing : an anthropological perspective / | 306.461 SOC Sociology as applied to medicine / | 306.461 SOC Sociology as applied to medicine / | 306.461 SOC Social epidemiology / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. The Universe of Sickness -- 2. Culture-bound Syndromes Unbound -- 3. Three Theories of Sickness and Healing -- 4. The Role of Society and Culture in Sickness and Healing -- 5. Anthropology and Epidemiology: One Logic or Two? -- 6. Biomedicine as a Cultural System -- 7. A World of Internal Medicine: Portrait of an Internist -- 8. Divisions of Labor: Obstetrician, Woman, and Society in Williams Obstetrics, 1903-1989 -- 9. Between Two Worlds: Physicians as Patients -- 10. From Medical Anthropology to Anthropological Medicine -- References -- Index.
The ways in which people respond to sickness differ greatly from society to society. In this book anthropologist and epidemiologist Robert A. Hahn examines how Western and non-Western cultures influence the definition, experience, and treatment of sickness.
Hahn begins by developing a definition of sickness that is based on the patient's perception of suffering and disturbance rather than on the physician's assessment of biomedical signs. After reviewing the principal theories that account for the forms of sickness and healing found in different historical and cultural contexts, he explores the relevance of both anthropological and epidemiological approaches to sickness, focusing on the persistent gap between white and black infant mortality in the United States. Hahn then describes contemporary Western medicine as it might be seen by a visiting foreign anthropologist.
He describes the culture of Western medicine and portrays the world of one physician at work, traces the evolution of obstetrics since 1903 by analyzing the principal textbook - Williams Obstetrics - through its first eighteen editions, and explores the gulf between physicians and their patients by examining the accounts of physicians who have written about their own sicknesses. He concludes by proposing ways that some of the ills of contemporary Western medicine might be remedied by applying anthropological principles to medical training and practice.
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