Delvecchio Good M J, Good B J, Schaffer C, Lind S E
Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School.
Cult Med Psychiatry. 1990 Mar;14(1):59-79. doi: 10.1007/BF00046704.
From the perspective of medical anthropology and comparative research, American oncology appears as a unique variant of international biomedical culture, particularly when contrasted with oncological practice in societies such as Japan and Italy. Based on interviews with 51 oncologists in Harvard teaching hospitals, this paper argues that American oncological practice draws on distinctive cultural meanings associated with "hope" and is infused with popular notions about the relationship between psyche and soma, the progressive efficacy of biotechnical interventions, truth-telling, and the nature of the physician-patient relationship.
从医学人类学和比较研究的角度来看,美国肿瘤学呈现为国际生物医学文化的一种独特变体,尤其是与日本和意大利等社会的肿瘤学实践形成对比时。基于对哈佛教学医院51位肿瘤学家的访谈,本文认为美国肿瘤学实践借鉴了与“希望”相关的独特文化意义,并融入了关于身心关系、生物技术干预的渐进疗效、告知真相以及医患关系本质的流行观念。