Full Description
Originally published in 1946, The Doctor's Job is an account of changes in medicine over the decades, focusing on the rapid expansion of medical science and the development of specialties. Carl Binger, a distinguished psychiatrist and physician and pioneer in psychosomatic medicine, reflects on the ethical, emotional, and intellectual challenges faced by doctors at the time and the evolving role of medicine in society. Today it can be read in its historical context.
This book is a re-issue originally published in 1946. The language used is a reflection of its era and no offence is meant by the Publishers to any reader by this re-publication.
Contents
The Oath of Hippocrates. Foreword. Introduction. 1. Background and Changes 2. Specialties and Specialists 3. The Choice of the Physician, Medical Fees and Etiquette 4. The Relationship of Doctor and Patient 5. Medicine and Psychoanalysis 6. Psychiatry and Medicine 7. Some Common Psychiatric Problems 8. Psychosomatic Medicine or Mind and Body Relationships 9. Stomach Ulcer 10. Allergy, Asthma and Tuberculosis 11. High Blood Pressure 12. The Cure and Control of Disease 13. Recent Achievements and Tasks Ahead 14. Convalescence and Chronic Disease 15. The Prevention of Illness 16. Office Practice, Hospitals and Outpatient Departments 17. Socialized Medicine or Paying the Piper 18. Past, Present and Future. Bibliography. Index.