Anatomy of an Illness as Perceived by the Patient by Norman Cousins
Author:Norman Cousins
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781504038539
Publisher: Open Road Media
Published: 2016-06-14T04:00:00+00:00
FIVE
HOLISTIC HEALTH AND HEALING
One of the results of the article in the New England Journal of Medicine was that I had opportunities to observe the holistic health movement at first hand. Leaders of the movement were good enough to say that I had had a holistic experience and that they hoped I might come to their meetings to talk about that experience as a way of reinforcing the beliefs of its members.
My problem, however, was that I had said as much as I thought I ought to say about the illness itself. Besides, I was aware of the tendency of a few advocates in the movement to juxtapose themselves against the entire medical profession, and I couldn’t sympathize with this approach. While I agreed with the prime tenets of the holistic movement, I saw a need to build bridges across the gap that for so long had separated the physician and the public. Moreover, what to me was most impressive, as I explain more fully in the next chapter, about the thousands of letters I received from doctors in response to the NEJM piece, was the sense of an important new mood in American medicine. I believed that the holistic movement would be gratified by the fast-growing evidence that many doctors were attempting to diagnose and treat the patient in the context of all the factors—work, nutrition, family, personality, emotions, environment—that figure in illness or breakdown.
In accepting invitations to speak or participate at these meetings, therefore, I sought—and received—permission to talk about the need to avoid a wall of separation between patients and physicians. It was true that the medical profession had allowed itself to become overly mystifying, even authoritarian, in its general relationships with the community-at-large. But there were genuine signs of a desire to inform and educate and not superimpose. Patients were being encouraged by their physicians to know as much as possible about issues involving their health. What was in the making, it seemed to me, was an expanding dialogue between the public and the profession on the proper division of responsibility between the two.
Such a dialogue, I felt certain, would impress physicians with the seriousness and soundness of intent of millions of people who believe that the primary role of the doctor is to help people to prevent illness, and not just to overcome it. And people in the movement, I felt equally convinced, would be impressed by the large number of doctors whose philosophy and practice were based on the idea that the mind and body are a single organism, and that the treatment of either one should not be undertaken without respect for the totality.
Great medical teachers have always impressed upon their students the need to make a careful assessment of everything that may interact in the cause and course of a disease. Hippocrates, the first major historical name in medicine, was both a theoretician and a practitioner. He tried to close existing gaps between the understanding of disease and its treatment. He was
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Inner Engineering: A Yogi's Guide to Joy by Sadhguru(6441)
The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment by Eckhart Tolle(5333)
Fear by Osho(4495)
Ikigai by Héctor García & Francesc Miralles(3895)
The Art of Happiness by The Dalai Lama(3847)
The Ultimate Bodybuilding Cookbook by Kendall Lou Schmidt(3708)
Yoga Therapy by Mark Stephens(3574)
The Little Book of Hygge by Meik Wiking(3447)
Why Buddhism is True by Robert Wright(3284)
The Healing Self by Deepak Chopra(3258)
Being Aware of Being Aware by Rupert Spira(3083)
The Hatha Yoga Pradipika (Translated) by Svatmarama(3075)
Shift into Freedom by Loch Kelly(3029)
Wild Words from Wild Women by Stephens Autumn(2936)
Work Clean by Dan Charnas(2893)
Happiness by Matthieu Ricard(2884)
More Language of Letting Go: 366 New Daily Meditations by Melody Beattie(2847)
Yoga Body & Mind Handbook by Jasmine Tarkeshi(2747)
Why I Am Not a Feminist by Jessa Crispin(2583)
