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Medical history books

39 pointsby Amboliaover 2 years ago

4 comments

mslaover 2 years ago
&gt; it’s still not all that clear if letting a doctor treat you is a better idea than staying home, eating right, exercising and minding your own business.<p>This is a pleasant fantasy people indulge in, but it is a fantasy: It&#x27;s the notion that disease, by which I mean serious disease, only happens to people who &quot;deserve it&quot; in some sense, whether by dissipated and profligate lifestyle or having the poor sense to live in a clearly disreputable and dirty neighborhood. That might work in some cases, as when a smoker gets lung cancer, but there are plenty of diseases where the cause is quite beyond anyone&#x27;s control and, possibly, not known at all. The obvious example is all genetic disorders, such as Type 1 Diabetes, which is invariably fatal untreated but can be managed very successfully with medical help, but there are also cancers of unknown origin, such as the one I had which is now in complete remission due to quite a lot of medical intervention, including CAR T-cell therapy.<p>So the author of the review has an ignorant, moralistic view of health, one which the books they&#x27;ve read have failed to shift. There is a lesson in there somewhere.
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roofoneover 2 years ago
I really enjoyed “The Butchering Art: Joseph Lister&#x27;s Quest to Transform the Grisly World of Victorian Medicine.”<p>About early surgery and the discovery and adoption of anti-septics.
ggmover 2 years ago
The Alarming History of Medicine: Amusing Anecdotes from Hippocrates to Heart Transplants - Richard Gordon (1997) is amusingly light-hearted. The author is more famous for medical fiction.<p>The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer - Siddhartha Mukherjee (2010) is very interesting.
boppo1over 2 years ago
Interesting topic aside:<p>What does the author mean by &quot;sexual sublimation&quot;? I can&#x27;t be sure from context and google says &#x27;sublimation&#x27; means phase change, but the referenced usage is &#x27;before antibiotics&#x27; which would appear to be a constant state or phase prior to the change antibiotics would bring. Is my vocabulary lacking or is the author just doing a bit of word salad here?
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