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Medicine, rationality, and experience: an anthropological perspective.

G. S. Rousseau
- 01 Oct 1994 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 4, pp 475-476
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TLDR
Books and internet are the recommended media to help you improving your quality and performance.
Abstract
Inevitably, reading is one of the requirements to be undergone. To improve the performance and quality, someone needs to have something new every day. It will suggest you to have more inspirations, then. However, the needs of inspirations will make you searching for some sources. Even from the other people experience, internet, and many books. Books and internet are the recommended media to help you improving your quality and performance.

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Citations
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Doctor in the house: the Internet as a source of lay health knowledge and the challenge to expertise

TL;DR: It is concluded that the Internet forms the site of a new struggle over expertise in health that will transform the relationship between the health professions and their clients.
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The Global Traffic in Human Organs1

TL;DR: A late‐20th‐century global trade in bodies, body parts, desires, and invented scarcities is mapped, inspired by Sweetness and Power, which traces the colonial and mercantilist routes of enslaving tastes and artificial needs.
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The Role of the Student-Teacher Relationship in the Formation of Physicians: The Hidden Curriculum as Process

TL;DR: This essay suggests that relationships are a critical mediating factor in the hidden curriculum, and explores evidence from the educational literature with respect to the student-teacher relationship, and the relevance that these studies hold for medical education.
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Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC): Framework for Comparative Study of Illness

TL;DR: The Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC) as discussed by the authors is a collection of locally adapted explanatory model interviews rooted in a common framework, which was developed by the authors of this paper.
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'I am not the kind of woman who complains of everything': illness stories on self and shame in women with chronic pain.

TL;DR: Issues of self and shame in illness accounts from women with chronic pain were shaped according to cultural discourses of gender and disease according to a gendered work of credibility as woman and as ill.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Doctor in the house: the Internet as a source of lay health knowledge and the challenge to expertise

TL;DR: It is concluded that the Internet forms the site of a new struggle over expertise in health that will transform the relationship between the health professions and their clients.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Global Traffic in Human Organs1

TL;DR: A late‐20th‐century global trade in bodies, body parts, desires, and invented scarcities is mapped, inspired by Sweetness and Power, which traces the colonial and mercantilist routes of enslaving tastes and artificial needs.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of the Student-Teacher Relationship in the Formation of Physicians: The Hidden Curriculum as Process

TL;DR: This essay suggests that relationships are a critical mediating factor in the hidden curriculum, and explores evidence from the educational literature with respect to the student-teacher relationship, and the relevance that these studies hold for medical education.
Journal ArticleDOI

Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC): Framework for Comparative Study of Illness

TL;DR: The Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC) as discussed by the authors is a collection of locally adapted explanatory model interviews rooted in a common framework, which was developed by the authors of this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

'I am not the kind of woman who complains of everything': illness stories on self and shame in women with chronic pain.

TL;DR: Issues of self and shame in illness accounts from women with chronic pain were shaped according to cultural discourses of gender and disease according to a gendered work of credibility as woman and as ill.