Temple University Press, 1999 eISBN: 978-1-4399-0567-8 | Paper: 978-1-56639-678-3 | Cloth: 978-1-56639-677-6 Library of Congress Classification R733.G654 1999 Dewey Decimal Classification 615.5
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
In November of 1998 The Journal of the American Medical Association devoted an entire issue to alternative medicine for the first time in its publishing history. According to survey results reported in the journal, 83 million Americans used some form of alternative medicine to preserve and maintain their health in 1997, a sharp increase from the 61 million who turned to alternative forms of care in 1990.
Michael S. Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is the first comprehensive account of the growing presence of alternative medicine in American society. Beginning with the basic premises of alternative medicine, Goldstein's book examines the clinical, economic, and political realities of the broad range of alternative care options and practices in the United States and explains why alternative medicine has become a viable choice for so many people who are ill or who seek to remain healthy.
Bringing history, policy, practice, personal experience, and in-depth sociological analysis together into one comprehensive volume, Goldstein -- one of the first recipients of funding from the National Institute of Health for research on alternative medicine -- also studies the complexities of the relationship between spirituality and alternative medicine and the changing role of alternative medicine in the larger context of American health care. Probing such issues as the corporatization of medicine, the role of alternative medicine in health care, and the dynamic relationship between conventional and alternative treatments, Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is more than the long-awaited introduction to the many forms of alternative medicine. It is also the measure of the implications of such care for practitioners, businesses, policymakers, and patients alike.
Alternative Health Care is the definitive guide for the millions of Americans interested in alternative medicine and treatment, American health care, the sociology of medicine, and American social issues.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Michael S. Goldstein is author of The Health Movement: Promoting Fitness in America and editor of 50 Simple Things You Can Do to Save Your Life. He serves as Professor of Public Health and Sociology at UCLA.
REVIEWS
"An important book and an informative, challenging and fun read. Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is the first, and greatly needed, extended overview of alternative health care, its development, and its impact."
—Alexandra Todd, Professor and Chair of Sociology at Suffolk University
"...[C]learly supportive of alternative medicine, [Goldstein] provides a logical explanation for its popularity that might enlighten its opponents. He explains alternative health care in the context of the problems with conventional health care. Indeed, looking at how these two worlds fit together or react to each other yields valuable information on how each field can respond better to patients."
—Los Angeles Times
"The author looks at the ethos of alternative medicine and examines broader questions of a possible 'paradigm shift' in medicine and whether alternative medicine might be integrated into mainstream medicine, given the current state of health care. Goldstein describes the range of alternative care, explores its popularity, its relation to spirituality, and its place in both the medical market and the current political climate."
—The Hastings Center Report
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONTENTS
The Emergence of Alternative Medicine
Victims of Medicine
Mind and Body
Health and Community
Preventing versus Curing
Crisis and Change in the Health Care System
The Synergy of Complaint: Birth of a Grievance
The Core of Alternative Medicine: Age Old Wisdom Made New
Holism
The Interpenetration of Mind, Body, and Spirit
Health as a Positive State on a Continuum with Illness
Life Suffused by the Flow of Energy
Vitalism
The Healing Process
The Core of Alternative Medicine
Medicine and the Spirit
Spirituality in America
Science and Spirit
Conventional Medicine's Response
Turning Religion into Medicine
Turning Medicine into Religion
Spirituality's Impact on the Future of Alternative Medicine
Is There Really an Alternative Medicine?
Alternative Medicine as a Professional Entity
Gaining Legal Acceptance
Recognition by Conventional Medicine
The Mass Media and the Public
Alternative Medicine as an Identity
Freedom and Health
The Politics of Alternative Medicine: Personal and Practical
The Personal as Political
Taking Responsibility: Community Empowerment and Coalitions
Counterculture Politics
Practical Politics
Certification and Credentialing
Licensure and Power
Evaluating Alternative Approaches
Federal Legislation
The Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM)
Alternative Medicine, Mainstream Markets
Alternative Medicine as Small Business
Alternative Medicine as Big Business
The Convergence into Mainstream Health Care
Alternative Medicine as Corporate Medicine
From Care to Commodity
The Future of Alternative Medicine
Assimilation and Cooptation: An Identity Movement
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
Temple University Press, 1999 eISBN: 978-1-4399-0567-8 Paper: 978-1-56639-678-3 Cloth: 978-1-56639-677-6
In November of 1998 The Journal of the American Medical Association devoted an entire issue to alternative medicine for the first time in its publishing history. According to survey results reported in the journal, 83 million Americans used some form of alternative medicine to preserve and maintain their health in 1997, a sharp increase from the 61 million who turned to alternative forms of care in 1990.
Michael S. Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is the first comprehensive account of the growing presence of alternative medicine in American society. Beginning with the basic premises of alternative medicine, Goldstein's book examines the clinical, economic, and political realities of the broad range of alternative care options and practices in the United States and explains why alternative medicine has become a viable choice for so many people who are ill or who seek to remain healthy.
Bringing history, policy, practice, personal experience, and in-depth sociological analysis together into one comprehensive volume, Goldstein -- one of the first recipients of funding from the National Institute of Health for research on alternative medicine -- also studies the complexities of the relationship between spirituality and alternative medicine and the changing role of alternative medicine in the larger context of American health care. Probing such issues as the corporatization of medicine, the role of alternative medicine in health care, and the dynamic relationship between conventional and alternative treatments, Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is more than the long-awaited introduction to the many forms of alternative medicine. It is also the measure of the implications of such care for practitioners, businesses, policymakers, and patients alike.
Alternative Health Care is the definitive guide for the millions of Americans interested in alternative medicine and treatment, American health care, the sociology of medicine, and American social issues.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Michael S. Goldstein is author of The Health Movement: Promoting Fitness in America and editor of 50 Simple Things You Can Do to Save Your Life. He serves as Professor of Public Health and Sociology at UCLA.
REVIEWS
"An important book and an informative, challenging and fun read. Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is the first, and greatly needed, extended overview of alternative health care, its development, and its impact."
—Alexandra Todd, Professor and Chair of Sociology at Suffolk University
"...[C]learly supportive of alternative medicine, [Goldstein] provides a logical explanation for its popularity that might enlighten its opponents. He explains alternative health care in the context of the problems with conventional health care. Indeed, looking at how these two worlds fit together or react to each other yields valuable information on how each field can respond better to patients."
—Los Angeles Times
"The author looks at the ethos of alternative medicine and examines broader questions of a possible 'paradigm shift' in medicine and whether alternative medicine might be integrated into mainstream medicine, given the current state of health care. Goldstein describes the range of alternative care, explores its popularity, its relation to spirituality, and its place in both the medical market and the current political climate."
—The Hastings Center Report
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONTENTS
The Emergence of Alternative Medicine
Victims of Medicine
Mind and Body
Health and Community
Preventing versus Curing
Crisis and Change in the Health Care System
The Synergy of Complaint: Birth of a Grievance
The Core of Alternative Medicine: Age Old Wisdom Made New
Holism
The Interpenetration of Mind, Body, and Spirit
Health as a Positive State on a Continuum with Illness
Life Suffused by the Flow of Energy
Vitalism
The Healing Process
The Core of Alternative Medicine
Medicine and the Spirit
Spirituality in America
Science and Spirit
Conventional Medicine's Response
Turning Religion into Medicine
Turning Medicine into Religion
Spirituality's Impact on the Future of Alternative Medicine
Is There Really an Alternative Medicine?
Alternative Medicine as a Professional Entity
Gaining Legal Acceptance
Recognition by Conventional Medicine
The Mass Media and the Public
Alternative Medicine as an Identity
Freedom and Health
The Politics of Alternative Medicine: Personal and Practical
The Personal as Political
Taking Responsibility: Community Empowerment and Coalitions
Counterculture Politics
Practical Politics
Certification and Credentialing
Licensure and Power
Evaluating Alternative Approaches
Federal Legislation
The Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM)
Alternative Medicine, Mainstream Markets
Alternative Medicine as Small Business
Alternative Medicine as Big Business
The Convergence into Mainstream Health Care
Alternative Medicine as Corporate Medicine
From Care to Commodity
The Future of Alternative Medicine
Assimilation and Cooptation: An Identity Movement
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE