Abstract
American medicine is under serious attack. The health care system is falling short of its major goal: improving the health of the population. The United States ranks only thirty-fifth in world life expectancy. But where American medicine arguably remains at a pinnacle in the world - in the status, wealth, and power of the profession of medicine - physicians are in danger of losing first rank. As other professions close the gap, their top economic position is threatened. Slippage may be measured also by other, less quantifiable factors, such as the highest prestige of physicians among all learned occupations. Queen of the Professions: The Rise and Decline of Medical Prestige and Power in America is a colorful yet authoritative work of social history offering readers a sturdy platform from which to confront looming issues about the future of American medical care. Its unique perspective brings crucial context to current debates about modern medicine, exploring in entertaining details its historical foundations and its present and future challenges.
Indice
1. From Healing Art to Scientific Profession: Medicine 500 BCE to 1850 CE
2. The Making of a Doctor: the Evolution of Medical Education
3. Medical Ethics
4. The Future of Medicine as a Profession: from Hippocrates to Dr. House