Available Formats
Disease and Its Control: The Shaping of Modern Thought
By (Author) Robert P. Hudson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
17th August 1983
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
616.001
Hardback
259
Dr. Hudson has written a lively, informative, and thought-provoking book.... Hudson traces the doctor's and patient's relationships to disease down through the centuries. He shows how we have obtained our information about diseases from ancient times to the present and describes the accompanying changes in viewpoints.... The author carefully distinguishes between disease ... and illness ... and demonstrates how failure to be aware of this separation has made problems for physicians and patients. Throughout the volume Hudson stresses the need for humility among physicians and medical scientists in their certainty about cause and effect.... Hudson's book will appeal to physicians, medical students, and that element in the general public that likes to think about what has been--and is--going on in medicine.-Journal of the American Medical Association
The author's objective is to review the major concepts leading to the present theories of disease and its control in the West. This general survey is organized by concept, by underlying philosophical categories, and examines disease by groupings--environmental, iatrogenic, and cultural.... Hudson, historian at the University of Kansas, knows his subject well and has provided us with a fresh approach to the history of medicine.-Library Journal
"The author's objective is to review the major concepts leading to the present theories of disease and its control in the West. This general survey is organized by concept, by underlying philosophical categories, and examines disease by groupings--environmental, iatrogenic, and cultural.... Hudson, historian at the University of Kansas, knows his subject well and has provided us with a fresh approach to the history of medicine."-Library Journal
"Dr. Hudson has written a lively, informative, and thought-provoking book.... Hudson traces the doctor's and patient's relationships to disease down through the centuries. He shows how we have obtained our information about diseases from ancient times to the present and describes the accompanying changes in viewpoints.... The author carefully distinguishes between disease ... and illness ... and demonstrates how failure to be aware of this separation has made problems for physicians and patients. Throughout the volume Hudson stresses the need for humility among physicians and medical scientists in their certainty about cause and effect.... Hudson's book will appeal to physicians, medical students, and that element in the general public that likes to think about what has been--and is--going on in medicine."-Journal of the American Medical Association
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