American folk medicine
نویسنده
چکیده
The Revolutionary period did (after some hesitation by those who dreamed of a society without hospitals) bring about the conversion of the main houses of Christian care for the sick poor in the large urban centres (Hotels-Dieu, Charite's, and Hopitaux Ge'neraux) to medical institutions concerned with the study and treatment of disease. The process of medicalization of Paris hospitals has been well documented by Michel Poucault, Erwin Ackerknecht, and others. The medical revolution has tended to overshadow the "medical old regime". As a result of this perspective (as well as the destruction of many of the relevant archives at Paris), our knowledge of hospital medicine in eighteenth-century France, as it was lived by patients, religious, medical and administrative personnel, and perceived by the rest of society, remains obscure. Unfortunately, the present collection of eleven papers does not present any new insights or interpretations. The proceedings of a colloquium, the collection is poorly organized, repetitive, and palpably in need of editorial attention. This is especially evident in the prolix introduction by Pierre Huard and M.-J. Imbault-Huart, and, to a lesser extent, in three other papers by the same team. Their discussion of the hospice of the Paris Royal College of Surgery, for example, dwells on previously published material while missing an opportunity to consider patients or diseases. They accuse "American authors", singling out this reviewer, of mistaking the small hospice for "la grande ecole chirurgicale parisienne". Suffice it to say that I never made such a claim. (Ironcially, it is the French authors who grossly mistake the scope of the small model surgical hospital by stating that it received ten times as many patients as it in fact did.) Vincent Comiti's brief discussion of the distribution of patients and disease categories is the only paper to address these central questions. Pierre Niaussat (French naval hospitals) and Marcel Baudot (archival sources) provide facts, lists, and hints for further research. Adrien Carre's sketch of English naval hospitals argues for their inferiority to French counterparts. Jean Filliozat reproduces an eyewitness description of Paris medical institutions left by a Swedish visitor in 1770-71. Jean-Pierre Kerneis's 'J.-B. Cassard and the birth of hospital medicine at Nantes in 1717' is the only piece of research based on hospital records in this disappointing collection. Toby Gelfand History of Medicine (Hannah Chair) University of Ottawa
منابع مشابه
Use of complementary and alternative medicine among family practice patients in south Texas.
Mind-body Relaxation 28% Meditation 15% Yoga 2% Imagery 6% Biofeedback 2% Hypnosis 1% Self-help group 4% Spiritual healing 8% Manual healing Massage 14% Acupressure 2% Therapeutic Touch 2% Chiropractic 5% Reflexology 2% Herbal remedies Aromatherapy 4% Herbs 24% Folk practices Home remedy 13% Folk healer 2% Curandero 1% Other practices Acupuncture 1% Homeopathy 1% Bioelectromagnetic 1% Light the...
متن کاملPlants Producing Ribosome-Inactivating Proteins in Traditional Medicine.
Ribosome-inactivating proteins (RIPs) are enzymes that deadenylate nucleic acids and are broadly distributed in the plant kingdom. Many plants that contain RIPs are listed in the pharmacopoeias of folk medicine all over the world, mostly because of their toxicity. This review analyses the position occupied in traditional medicine by plants from which RIPs have been isolated. The overview starts...
متن کاملA Cross-cultural Comparison of Factors Related to Help-seeking Attitudes for Psychological Disorder
It has been reported that Asian people have negative views of mental illness, including beliefs that it is incurable and shameful. Asian people also tend to attribute causes of mental disorders to factors less susceptible to personal influence such as supernatural factors, and are likely to have an external health locus of control which reflects beliefs that health outcomes are a product of ext...
متن کاملLessons from history: why race and ethnicity have played a major role in biomedical research.
Before any citizen enters the role of scientist, medical practitioner, lawyer, epidemiologist, and so on, each and all grow up in a society in which the categories of human differentiation are folk categories that organize perceptions, relations, and behavior. That was true during slavery, during Reconstruction, the eugenics period, the two World Wars, and is no less true today. While every per...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید
ثبت ناماگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید
ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Medical History
دوره 27 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1983