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- catalog abstract "The author interviewed and portrayed seven doctors to deepen her understanding of medicine's transformation during the twentieth century. Those doctors interviewed are as follows: J. Dunbar Shields -- Saul Jarcho -- Paul Bruce Beeson -- Mary B. Olney -- Jonathan Evans Rhoads -- C. Paul Hodgkinson -- John Romano.".
- catalog contributor b4318366.
- catalog created "c1993.".
- catalog date "1993".
- catalog date "c1993.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1993.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 329-345) and index.".
- catalog description "Introduction: Medicine, nature, culture -- Seven doctors -- pt. 1. Becoming a doctor: 1920s and 1930s. Medical morality: past and present -- Shields: Care and ignorance in New Orleans and New York -- Jarcho: Scholar in medicine -- Beeson: Quintessential doctor from Alaska -- Olney: Pediatrics, medicine beyond hospital walls -- Rhoads: Quaker surgeon -- Hodgkinson: From pharmacy to gynecology and obstetrics -- Romano: Builder of psychiatry -- Defining medicine and the physician's identity -- pt. 2. Specialization: 1930s. Combining care and science: the residency -- Beeson: From general practice to Camelot -- Olney: Vision of the whole child -- Rhoads: Research surgeon, from patient to lab and back again -- Hodgkinson: Surgical expertise and all the emotions -- Romano: "Brain spot or mind twist", attempts to understand psychosis -- Becoming agents of change -- pt. 3. Generalist, scientists, and curers: 1930s and 1940s. Curing and other trends -- Shields: "Any kind of work" -- Jarcho: Independence in internal medicine -- Beeson: Infectious disease expert -- Olney: Diabetes camp -- "Not just a hospital doctor" -- Rhoads: Doctor, scientist, patient -- three views of illness -- Hodgkinson: Breasts, babies, and science, and idealism -- Romano: "One song to sing", Education of the medical student -- A moral-technical profession -- pt. 4. Power and influence: 1946-1970s. Idealism and conflict in the Golden Age -- Shields: "Medicine was glorious fun" -- Jarcho: Diagnosis, treatment, and the conditions of life -- Beeson: Yale and Oxford- role model in two countries -- Olney: Camp, clinics, and schools -- Rhoads: Philanthropy and education -- Hodgkinson: "No limit on what one could do" -- Romano: Bringing psychiatry closer to medicine -- An essential tension -- Medicine's means, and ends, 1970s-1900s: technological superiority, moral confusion -- Transforming medicine and culture.".
- catalog description "The author interviewed and portrayed seven doctors to deepen her understanding of medicine's transformation during the twentieth century. Those doctors interviewed are as follows: J. Dunbar Shields -- Saul Jarcho -- Paul Bruce Beeson -- Mary B. Olney -- Jonathan Evans Rhoads -- C. Paul Hodgkinson -- John Romano.".
- catalog extent "x, 354 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Healer's tale.".
- catalog identifier "0299135500 :".
- catalog isFormatOf "Healer's tale.".
- catalog isPartOf "Life course studies".
- catalog issued "1993".
- catalog issued "c1993.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Madison, Wis. : University of Wisconsin Press,".
- catalog relation "Healer's tale.".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog subject "610/.973/0922 B 20".
- catalog subject "Physicians United States Biography.".
- catalog subject "R153 .K24 1993".
- catalog subject "WZ 140 AA1 K19h 1993".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: Medicine, nature, culture -- Seven doctors -- pt. 1. Becoming a doctor: 1920s and 1930s. Medical morality: past and present -- Shields: Care and ignorance in New Orleans and New York -- Jarcho: Scholar in medicine -- Beeson: Quintessential doctor from Alaska -- Olney: Pediatrics, medicine beyond hospital walls -- Rhoads: Quaker surgeon -- Hodgkinson: From pharmacy to gynecology and obstetrics -- Romano: Builder of psychiatry -- Defining medicine and the physician's identity -- pt. 2. Specialization: 1930s. Combining care and science: the residency -- Beeson: From general practice to Camelot -- Olney: Vision of the whole child -- Rhoads: Research surgeon, from patient to lab and back again -- Hodgkinson: Surgical expertise and all the emotions -- Romano: "Brain spot or mind twist", attempts to understand psychosis -- Becoming agents of change -- pt. 3. Generalist, scientists, and curers: 1930s and 1940s. Curing and other trends -- Shields: "Any kind of work" -- Jarcho: Independence in internal medicine -- Beeson: Infectious disease expert -- Olney: Diabetes camp -- "Not just a hospital doctor" -- Rhoads: Doctor, scientist, patient -- three views of illness -- Hodgkinson: Breasts, babies, and science, and idealism -- Romano: "One song to sing", Education of the medical student -- A moral-technical profession -- pt. 4. Power and influence: 1946-1970s. Idealism and conflict in the Golden Age -- Shields: "Medicine was glorious fun" -- Jarcho: Diagnosis, treatment, and the conditions of life -- Beeson: Yale and Oxford- role model in two countries -- Olney: Camp, clinics, and schools -- Rhoads: Philanthropy and education -- Hodgkinson: "No limit on what one could do" -- Romano: Bringing psychiatry closer to medicine -- An essential tension -- Medicine's means, and ends, 1970s-1900s: technological superiority, moral confusion -- Transforming medicine and culture.".
- catalog title "The healer's tale : transforming medicine and culture / Sharon R. Kaufman.".
- catalog type "Biography. fast".
- catalog type "text".