Negotiating illness: Doctors, patients, and families in the nineteenth century

被引:7
|
作者
Theriot, NM [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Louisville, Louisville, KY 40292 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1002/jhbs.1065
中图分类号
C09 [社会科学史];
学科分类号
060305 ;
摘要
This article is based on medical literature published in American and British monographs and medical journals in which physician-authors utilized case histories of women's nervous and mental disease and related gynecological complaints. I argue that the interaction of physicians, patients, and families was a relationship in which women patients contributed to the formation of medical knowledge and forged a modem sense of body and self. After an introductory section on reading case studies, I call attention to the ways in which physicians, patients, and patients' families educated each other about wellness and illness, which formed the basis of physicians' interpretation of disease. Next, I point out how the case histories structured an ideal script for doctor, patient, and family, based on physicians' sympathetic authority and patients' willingness to tell and show all. And finally, I suggest that the doctor-patient dialogue encouraged women patients to see themselves as medically manageable bodies and as individuals separate from families. (C) 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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页码:349 / 368
页数:20
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