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Is it possible to give sense to illness?

In Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka & Evandro Agazzi (eds.), Life interpretation and the sense of illness within the human condition. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 153--179 (2001)

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  1. Rethinking the doctor–patient relationship: toward a hermeneutically-informed epistemology of medical practice.Paul Healy - 2019 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 22 (2):287-295.
    Although typically implicit, clinicians face an inherent conflict between their roles as medical healers and as providers of technical biomedicine (Scott et al. in Philos Ethics Humanit Med 4:11, 2009). This conflict arises from the tension between the physicalist model which still predominates in medical training and practice and the extra-physicalist dimensions of medical practice as epitomised in the concept of patient-centred care. More specifically, the problem is that, as grounded in a "borrowed" physicalist philosophy, the dominant "applied scientist" model (...)
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  • “Nobody Understands”: On a Cardinal Phenomenon of Palliative Care.Tomasz Okon - 2006 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 31 (1):13 – 46.
    In the clinical practice of palliative medicine, recommended communication models fail to approximate the truth of suffering associated with an impending death. I provide evidence from patients' stories and empiric research alike to support this observation. Rather than attributing this deficiency to inadequate training or communication skills, I examine the epistemological premises of the biomedical language governing the patient-physician communication. I demonstrate that the contemporary biomedicine faces a fundamental aporetic occlusion in attempting to examine death. This review asserts that the (...)
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