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Patients
Progress:
Doctors and Doctoring in Eighteenth-Century England
by Dorothy Porter,
Roy Porter
Sale Price: $14.95
(Regular Price
$19.95)
Hardcover 313 pp.
6 in. x 9-1/4 in.
ISBN: 0804717443
Pub. Date: September 1989
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Condition: NEW (Unread).
From original
book jacket description: "Premodern society in England
was overshadowed by illness and the threat of death. Disease descended
suddenly, selecting individual victims or attacking entire households
and the community at large. What did people do when they fell sick?
"The authors investigate the well-established tradition of self-diagnosis
and medication, called "family medicine" or "kitchen
physic"; the use of traditional healers, such as midwives, itinerants,
and "wise women"; and the flourishing world of quacks whose
nostrums promised to restore one's youth or to cure cancer. Doctors
and the medical profession were not held in especially high regard ("If
the world knew the villainy and knavery - besides ignorance - of the
physicians and apothecaries, the people would throw stones at'em as
they walked in the streets"). The authors examine the problems
and opportunities of practitioners in terms of treatments, remuneration,
and social status and describe how practitioners tried to achieve ascendancy
over their often suspicious patients.
"What did doctors have to offer the sick in the centuries before
Victorian professionalization and the birth of scientific medicine?
This question is analyzed against the background of the cultural and
religious attitudes of the time and in the context of existing medical
knowledge, with special attention paid to the interaction between women
patients and doctors.
Throughout, the authors emphasize the personal relations between sick
people and their doctors - what the sick thought of their doctors and
how doctors regarded their patients. Their analysis is based on firsthand
attitudes and experiences, as recorded in letters, diaries, journals,
and autobiographies."
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