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  Vol. 137 No. 2, February 1977 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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The Malaise in Internal Medicine

John F. Burnum, MD

Arch Intern Med. 1977;137(2):226-229.


Abstract

Internists today are discomforted by uncertainty of identity, governmental interference with practice, total responsibility for patients' health, and by waning of faith in science. As personal "caring" physicians, internists are secure in primary care but should maintain their distinctive scholarly leadership as master clinicians and consultants. Humanism and science are one in patient care. Future practice patterns depend on physicians themselves participating in policy decisions for inevitable controls and rationing of government financed health services. The public must understand that good health depends not only on physicians but also on a better society and what people are willing to do for themselves. Western culture has been shaken by the cruel paradoxes of progress and technology. But, human choice not science is at fault, and only wisdom in the use of science will save us.

(Arch Intern Med 137:226-229, 1977)



Author Affiliations

From the University of Alabama Medical System, Tuscaloosa and Birmingham.


Footnotes

Accepted for publication June 9, 1976.

Read before the Ohio State University College of Medicine and the Columbus (Ohio) Society of Internal Medicine, Nov 11, 1975.

Reprint requests to 400-C 10th St E, Tuscaloosa, AL 35401 (Dr Burnum).



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