Duke University Press is pleased to announce the second edition of the bestselling "Social Medicine Reader." The "Reader" provides a survey of the challenging issues facing today's health care providers, patients, and caregivers by bringing together moving narratives of illness, commentaries by physicians, debates about complex medical cases, and conceptually and empirically based writings by scholars in medicine, the social sciences, and the humanities. The first edition of "The Social Medicine Reader" was a single volume. This significantly revised and expanded second edition is divided...
Duke University Press is pleased to announce the second edition of the bestselling "Social Medicine Reader." The "Reader" provides a survey of the cha...
Duke University Press is pleased to announce the second edition of the bestselling Social Medicine Reader. The Reader provides a survey of the challenging issues facing today s health care providers, patients, and caregivers by bringing together moving narratives of illness, commentaries by physicians, debates about complex medical cases, and conceptually and empirically based writings by scholars in medicine, the social sciences, and the humanities. The first edition of The Social Medicine Reader was a single volume. This significantly revised and expanded second edition...
Duke University Press is pleased to announce the second edition of the bestselling Social Medicine Reader. The Reader provides a survey ...
Larry R. Churchill Joseph B. Fanning David Schenck
Being a patient is a unique interpersonal experience but it is also a universal human experience. The relationships formed when we are patients can also teach some of life's most important lessons, and these relationships provide a special window into ethics, especially the ethics of healthcare professionals. This book answers two basic questions: As patients see it, what things allow relationships with healthcare providers to become therapeutic? What can this teach us about healthcare ethics? This volume presents detailed descriptions and analyses of 50 interviews with 58 patients,...
Being a patient is a unique interpersonal experience but it is also a universal human experience. The relationships formed when we are patients can al...