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Pharmacracy
ISBN/GTIN

Product description

In recent decades, American medicine has become increasingly politicized and politics has become increasingly medicalized. Behaviors previously seen as virtuous or wicked, wise or unwise are now dealt with as healthy or sick--unwanted behaviors to be controlled as if they were health issues. The modern penchant for transforming human problems into diseases and judicial sanctions into treatments, replacing the rule of law with the rule of medical discretion, leads to the creation of a type of government social critic Thomas Szasz calls pharmacracy.

Medicalizing troublesome behaviors and social problems is tempting to voters and politicians alike: it panders to the people by promising to satisfy their needs for dependence on medical authority and offers easy self-aggrandizement to politicians as the dispensers of more and better health care. Thus, the people gain a convenient scapegoat, enabling them to avoid personal responsibility for their behavior. The government gains a rationale for endless and politically expedient wars against social problems defined as public health emergencies. The health care system gains prestige, funding, and bureaucratic power that only an alliance with the political system can provide.

However, Szasz warns, the creeping substitution of pharmacracy for democracy--private medical concerns increasingly perceived as requiring a political response--inexorably erodes personal freedom and dignity. Pharmacracy: Medicine and Politics in America is a clear and convincing presentation of this hidden danger, all too often ignored in our health care debates and avoided in our political contests.
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Details

Additional ISBN/GTIN9780313075865
Product TypeE-book
BindingE-book
FormatPDF
Format noteDRM Adobe
Publishing date30/04/2001
Edition1. Auflage
LanguageEnglish
File size1200 Kbytes
Article no.13722681
CatalogsVC
Data source no.5048066
Product groupBU460
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Ein Buch über die weibliche Pubertät, das sich an sowohl an Eltern, als auch an deren Töchter richtet? Ich war skeptisch, aber wenn es jemand schafft, gut lesbares Infotainment zu liefern, dabei kompetent, aber gleichzeitig lässig und lustig zu sein, dann ist das the one and only Dr.med. Sheila de Liz. Analoge Leser*innen kennen die Gynäkologin vielleicht schon von der Spiegel-Bestsellerliste, wo ihre Werke zum weiblichen Körper und zu den Wechseljahren über lange Zeit Stammplätze inne hatten; deren Kinder und Enkelkinder begegnen wahrscheinlich eher dem TikTok-Kanal @doktorsex, den sie zusammen mit einem Kollegen betreibt. Als Mutter, Frauenärztin und online ist sie täglich mit einem Haufen Unsicherheit und Fragen konfrontiert, die sie hier offen, schamfrei und direkt beantwortet.
So cool und empowernd kann und sollte ein generationsübergreifender Ratgeber sein- ich finde, sie hat alles richtig gemacht.


Expectant parents get almost as many unsolicited book recommendations as they do pieces of advice from their friends, family ... and strangers on the street.
This recommendation comes every bit as unsolicited of course but I cannot help but think it should be prescribed by every doctor in the world after the first positive pregnancy test (even before in fact).
Oster is an economist and she has made it her mission to analyse the best data out there to help women make good decisions about their pregnancies (and by extension their partners too). If the long list of pregnancy prohibitions has ever seemed strange to you, this book will help you to differentiate between the very real dangers of some substances on your baby and the foods and drinks that really aren't that dangerous at all.
Oster's explicit goal is to help people make good evidence-based decisions so the book doesn't judge those who prefer ultra caution but it does help put the choice back into pregnant women's lives.

Author

THOMAS SZASZ is Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus at State University of New York Health Science Center in Syracuse. He is widely recognized as the world's foremost critic of psychiatric coercions and excuses and as a leading philosopher of liberty-and-responsibility. He is the author of 24 books, including The Myth of Mental Illness (1961) and Our Right to Drugs: The Case for a Free Market (Praeger, 1992).