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The Ideology of Modern Medical Culture

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Title: The Ideology of Modern Medical Culture


1
The Ideology of Modern Medical Culture
2
Ancient Greek Medicine
  • Allopathy Literally--the treatment of disease by
    producing effects that are different from those
    produced by the disease (cold compresses for
    fever, hallucinogens to fight pain)
  • Opposed to Homeopathy Literally the treatment of
    disease by trying to induce an effect similar to
    the disease (sweating out a fever, fighting a
    poison with another poison)
  • These terms have taken on different meanings
    today from their original Greek meanings

3
Modern Use of Term Allopathic
  • Allopathy today implies a struggle against
    disease or medical approaches that seek, through
    radical interventions, to halt, impede, or modify
    the progress of a disease (eg. Drugs, surgery)
  • Allopathy is the main approach used in modern
    scientific or regular medicine

4
Modern Use of Term Homeopathic
  • Homeopathy today implies medical approaches other
    than allopathic
  • Does not emphasize radical interventions, but
    rather subtle changes in lifestyle, habits that
    adversely affect health, and low-tech home
    treatment

5
Two Conceptions of Disease
  • Ontological View Diseases are thought of as
    separate entities from us
  • Ontological view has dominated allopathic
    medicine
  • Ecological View Diseases are thought of as an
    expression of the individual
  • Ecological View is more common in Homeopathic
    medicine

6
Impact of Allopathic Approach
  • Medical practitioners are viewed as fighters
    resisting the invasion of diseases
  • Patient is viewed as the battlefieldthis is
    the origin of the term patientone who must
    wait patiently upon the outcome of the struggle
    between the disease and the doctor
  • Patient is viewed as having a passive role in the
    conduct of medicine

7
Empiricism
  • Empiricism is an 17th philosophical movement that
    argued that knowledge should be established by
    the use of our senses
  • Proof for empirical knowledge should therefore
    always be able to be demonstrated publicly in a
    repeatable fashion
  • Knowledge that does not come from senses (such as
    intuition, personal insight or other subjective
    sources) is to be mistrusted
  • Empiricism is a basic part of the scientific
    outlook

8
Mechanistic Outlook
  • Influential philosopher Rene Descartes argued
    that people are (dualistic) in naturebody and a
    completely distinct soul
  • His view encouraged the scientific investigation
    of the body as a mechanism
  • Scientific approach is reductionisticthings
    can be fully understood by examining their
    parts
  • Knowledge of wholes is unnecessary

9
Individualism
  • Allopathy Medicine is about fighting a disease
    in a patient
  • Ontological View patient is invaded from
    outside
  • Mechanistic view Medicine is about fixing the
    bodies of patients
  • Focus of modern medicine is on individuals, not
    the social context in which these individuals live

10
Scientific Medicine (18th CenturyToday)
  1. Medicine is about disease, not the patient
  2. Regards the body as a machine
  3. The objective physician mistrusts his or her
    own subjective judgments and tries to ignore the
    beliefs of the patient
  4. Relies instead on empirical testing
  5. Patient is passive bystander to the healing
    process
  6. Individual is the focus of medicine, not societies

11
Postmans Criticisms of Scientific Medicine
  • Technology is not a neutral element in the
    practice of medicine
  • Use of technologies creates imperatives (ways
    of thinking and acting) through wide-ranging
    social systems, eg. reliance on machines in
    medicine reinforces our belief in the scientific
    medical approach
  • Technology can change the way doctors view the
    practice of medicine

12
Leons Examples of Monumental Medical
Contributors
  • William Harvey overcame religious taboos about
    dissection and discovered the circulatory system
  • Pasteur rejected vital spirits and other
    mystical elements in his theory of infection
  • Darwins theory revealed that there is no plan to
    nature, and thus, it is up to us to fix it
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