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Research article summary:
The doctor and the 'delta factor': Walker Percy and the dilemma of modern medicine.
Abstract Extract: As medical science progresses, a tension has developed between the art of medicine, which deals with patients as individual persons, and the science itself, which focuses on the objective pathology.This tension is furthered as medicine identifies itself ... (Full abstract text below) Published 2002
in Journal: Perspect Biol Med
(Language : eng)
Full Pubmed Extract
This information was retrieved, real-time, on your behalf from the public area of the Pubmed website:
1. Perspect Biol Med.
2002 ;45(4):579-92
The doctor and the "delta factor": Walker Percy and the dilemma of modern medicine.
Majeres KD
Residency Training program, Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75390, USA. kmajeres@yahoo.com
As medical science progresses, a tension has developed between the art of medicine, which deals with patients as individual persons, and the science itself, which focuses on the objective pathology.This tension is furthered as medicine identifies itself increasingly with science. To explore the consequences of this unbalanced identification, and the strain it places on the physician-patient relationship, this article examines the thought of Walker Percy, and in particular his novel The Second Coming. In this novel, Percy, a physician by training, presents a case of a patient suffering at the hands of medicine-turned-reductionist. The novel highlights the breakdown of communication between physician and patient within modern medicine, and raises important questions about how to best understand, and thereby preserve, medicine's true art.
PMID : 12388889 [PubMed - Indexed for MEDLINE]
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Full Author Information
| First Name | LastName | Initials |
| Kevin D | Majeres | KD |
Affiliation: Residency Training program, Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75390, USA. kmajeres@yahoo.com
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Category links from this article:- Attitude to Death
- History, 20th Century
- Humans
- Literature, Modern - history
- Medicine in Literature
- Mental Disorders - history
- Physician-Patient Relations
- United States
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