From Doctor to Healer
The Transformative Journey
Rutgers University Press
Why would a successful physician who has undergone seven years of rigorous medical training take the trouble to seek out and learn to practice alternative methods of healing such as homeopathy and Chinese medicine? From Doctor to Healer answers this question as it traces the transformational journeys of physicians who move across the philosophical spectrum of American medicine from doctor to healer. Robbie Davis-Floyd and Gloria St. John conducted extensive interviews to discover how and why physicians make the move to alternative medicine, what sparks this shift, and what beliefs they abandon or embrace in the process.
After outlining the basic models of American health care-the technocratic, humanistic, and holistic-the authors follow the thoughts and experiences of forty physicians as they expand their horizons in order to offer effective patient care. The book focuses on the radical shift from one end of the spectrum to the other-from the technocratic approach to holism-made by most of the interviewees. Because many American physicians find such a drastic change too threatening, the authors also address the less radical transition to humanism-a movement toward compassionate care arising from within the medical system.Rich and extensive interview excerpts bring the theoretical issues to life throughout the book. One is witness, in part to the process, in part to the product of a shamanic journey and ideological conversionùthough one more of inclusion than of exclusion. . . . Highly recommended as [a] text in American ethnomedicine.
A fine resource for medical students, doctors, and medical educators.
The path one takes from being a doctor to embracing the fullness of our heritage as healers always leads right back to our own hearts. This book describes the journey and the terrain in all its many facets.
A valuable map of the complex medical revolution that is slowly affecting us all.
Rich and extensive interview excerpts bring the theoretical issues to life throughout the book. One is witness, in part to the process, in part to the product of a shamanic journey and ideological conversionùthough one more of inclusion than of exclusion. . . . Highly recommended as [a] text in American ethnomedicine.
A fine resource for medical students, doctors, and medical educators.
The path one takes from being a doctor to embracing the fullness of our heritage as healers always leads right back to our own hearts. This book describes the journey and the terrain in all its many facets.
A valuable map of the complex medical revolution that is slowly affecting us all.
ROBBIE DAVIS-FLOYD is a research fellow at the University of Texas, Austin, and a medical anthropologist. She is the author of Birth as an American Rite of Passage and co-editor of Childbirth and Authoritative Knowledge: Cross-Cultural Perspectives and Cyborg Babies: From Techno-Sex to Techno-Tots.
GLORIA ST. JOHN has been involved in the business end of health care for 25 years and has served as executive director of the MetaPhysicians.
GLORIA ST. JOHN has been involved in the business end of health care for 25 years and has served as executive director of the MetaPhysicians.
Foreword
Introduction
Part I. The Technocratic Paradigm
1. The Technocratic Model of Medicine
2. Medical Training as Technocratic Initiation
Part II. The Humanistic and Holistic Paradigms
3. The Humanistic Model of Medicine
4. The Holistic Model of Medicine
Part III. The Paradigm Shift
5. Catalysts for Transformation
6. The Transformative Journey
Part IV. Living Holism
7. Practicing Holistic Medicine in a Technocratic Society
8. Visions for the Future of Medicine
Appendix
Notes
References
Index
Introduction
Part I. The Technocratic Paradigm
1. The Technocratic Model of Medicine
2. Medical Training as Technocratic Initiation
Part II. The Humanistic and Holistic Paradigms
3. The Humanistic Model of Medicine
4. The Holistic Model of Medicine
Part III. The Paradigm Shift
5. Catalysts for Transformation
6. The Transformative Journey
Part IV. Living Holism
7. Practicing Holistic Medicine in a Technocratic Society
8. Visions for the Future of Medicine
Appendix
Notes
References
Index