Quiz March 29, OI 77-109
1. What was ambiguous about the vampire metaphor, for Biss?
2. What struck Biss as both magical and mundane?
3. Smallpox is now no longer a disease, but a what?
4. Who were the Polio Pioneers? Where is polio still endemic, and why?
5. What are the profound differences between ethyl and methyl mercury?
6. How did Andrew Wakefield cause a "cascade of panic"?
7. Who accused WHO of collusion in 2009?
8. Why does Susan Sontag say public health is difficult to promote in our society?
9. Why does Arthur Caplan say the marketplace model of healthcare is dangerous?
10. When would Biss consider surgery a conservative option?
11. For what is there no credible evidence, "Dr. Bob" notwithstanding?
12. What's Biss's Dad's argument for preventive medicine?
March 27, OI 40-76
1. "Natural" has popularly come to mean what, in the context of medicine?
2. The most unnatural aspect of vaccination is what?
3. What led to the creation of the EPA?
4. What kind of thinking makes no room for ambiguous identities, and what does it threaten?
5. What "troubling dualisms" characterize the vaccination debate?
6. What practice went on in China and India for hundreds of years, to combat smallpox?
7. What metaphor is implied by "inoculation"?
8. What disappointed Biss about the immuno-semiotics conference?
9. What game metaphor does Biss prefer, to describe our immune systems and viral pathogens?
10. What caused the fatal form of croup that has virtually disappeared in this country since the '30s?
11. What caused the spread of puerpal sepsis ("childbed fever")?
12. What would exceed federal food-safety levels for DDT and PCBs at the grocery store, if sold there?
March 20, Brave New World
1. Define medicalization.
2. What is social iatrogenesis?
3. What is a practical example of social iatrogenesis?
4. Peter Conrad has proposed to consider medicalization in what three respects?
5. What are the engines of medicalization?
6. (T/F) The use of pharmaceuticals and medicalization are the same thing.
7. What aspects of medicalization are not directly connected to the use of drugs?
8. (T/F) There are situations of medicalization which do not include the consumption of pharmaceuticals as their main feature.
9. What situations of medicalization do not include the consumption of pharmaceuticals as their main feature?
10. Define pharmaceuticalization
11. Give an example of pharmaceuticalization
12. What three main causes are proposed to have fostered pharmaceuticalization?
13. (T/F) Causes of mental illness are often described as etiology unknown.
14. What are the main consequences of the latest version of the DSM?
15. Define risks.
16. Define dangers.
17. As related to health, risk may be connected to what?
18. (T/F) It can be easier for political institutions to embrace a clinical and biological definition of a disease instead of addressing the social causes underlying these pathological conditions.
19. What is lacking in the risk factor model?
20. Define human enhancement.
March 22, OI 3-39.
1. The stories of Achilles and the dragon imply what about immunity?
2. "A valuable asset placed in the care of someone to whom it does not ultimately belong" is Biss's definition of what? OR, it captures her understanding of what?
3. Our vaccines are now sterile, so anti-vaccine activists' greatest fear is not of bacterial but ____ contamination.
4. What is Dracula about, besides vampires?
5. Who said love is known "by its fruits"?
6. Contributions to the "banking of immunity" give rise to the principle of ____ immunity.
7. What's the most common way that infants contract hep B?
8. What raises the probability that undervaccinated children will contract a disease?
9. Who or what were microbiologist Graham Rook's "old friends"?
10. "There is never enough evidence to prove that an event _____ happen? (can/can't)
March 15, Medical Paternalism
1. What is “autonomy” drawn from vs. “paternalism” being drawn from the role of the father?
2. According to Childress what makes paternalism morally interesting?
3. In what cases should a physician override one person's autonomy?
4.What does Dworkin call liberty in contradiction to liberty as license?
5. what are the two factors of justification often given for paternalistic interventions?
6.What two matters does the duty to respect autonomy involve?
7. What could a policy that affirms “you should care for yourself” be interpreted as?
March 1, Origin
1. What is evolution?
2. What is entropy?
3. What is the proposed Seventh Kingdom?
4. What happens to humans and technology, according to Edmond Kirsch?
5. What is the price of greatness?
6. Are humans in a symbiotic relationship with technology already?
Years after research contradicts common practices, patients continue to demand them and doctors continue to deliver. The result is an epidemic of unnecessary and unhelpful treatment.by David Epstein, ProPublica February 22, 2017
First, listen to the story with the happy ending: At 61, the executive was in excellent health. His blood pressure was a bit high, but everything else looked good, and he exercised regularly. Then he had a scare. He went for a brisk post-lunch walk on a cool winter day, and his chest began to hurt. Back inside his office, he sat down, and the pain disappeared as quickly as it had come.
That night, he thought more about it: middle-aged man, high blood pressure, stressful job, chest discomfort. The next day, he went to a local emergency department. Doctors determined that the man had not suffered a heart attack and that the electrical activity of his heart was completely normal. All signs suggested that the executive had stable angina — chest pain that occurs when the heart muscle is getting less blood-borne oxygen than it needs, often because an artery is partially blocked.
A cardiologist recommended that the man immediately have a coronary angiogram, in which a catheter is threaded into an artery to the heart and injects a dye that then shows up on special x-rays that look for blockages. If the test found a blockage, the cardiologist advised, the executive should get a stent, a metal tube that slips into the artery and forces it open.
While he was waiting in the emergency department, the executive took out his phone and searched “treatment of coronary artery disease.” He immediately found information from medical journals that said medications, like aspirin and blood-pressure-lowering drugs, should be the first line of treatment. The man was an unusually self-possessed patient, so he asked the cardiologist about what he had found. The cardiologist was dismissive and told the man to “do more research.” Unsatisfied, the man declined to have the angiogram and consulted his primary-care doctor.
The primary-care physician suggested a different kind of angiogram, one that did not require a catheter but instead used multiple x-rays to image arteries. That test revealed an artery that was partially blocked by plaque, and though the man’s heart was pumping blood normally, the test was incapable of determining whether the blockage was dangerous. Still, his primary-care doctor, like the cardiologist at the emergency room, suggested that the executive have an angiogram with a catheter, likely followed by a procedure to implant a stent. The man set up an appointment with the cardiologist he was referred to for the catheterization, but when he tried to contact that doctor directly ahead of time, he was told the doctor wouldn’t be available prior to the procedure. And so the executive sought yet another opinion. That’s when he found Dr. David L. Brown, a professor in the cardiovascular division of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. The executive told Brown that he’d felt pressured by the previous doctors and wanted more information. He was willing to try all manner of noninvasive treatments — from a strict diet to retiring from his stressful job — before having a stent implanted.
The executive had been very smart to seek more information, and now, by coming to Brown, he was very lucky, too. Brown is part of the RightCare Alliance, a collaboration between health-care professionals and community groups that seeks to counter a trend: increasing medical costs without increasing patient benefits. As Brown put it, RightCare is “bringing medicine back into balance, where everybody gets the treatment they need, and nobody gets the treatment they don’t need.” And the stent procedure was a classic example of the latter. In 2012, Brown had coauthored a paper that examined every randomized clinical trial that compared stent implantation with more conservative forms of treatment, and he found that stents for stable patients prevent zero heart attacks and extend the lives of patients a grand total of not at all. In general, Brown says, “nobody that’s not having a heart attack needs a stent.” (Brown added that stents may improve chest pain in some patients, albeit fleetingly.) Nonetheless, hundreds of thousands of stable patients receive stents annually, and one in 50 will suffer a serious complication or die as a result of the implantation procedure... (continues)