Bodemer C W
J Fam Pract. 1979 Nov;9(5):827-32.
The tradition fo Western medicine established during the period of classical antiquity and extending through the early modern period encouraged the physician to avoid or to refuse to treat the seriously and/or terminally ill patient. The cultural environment and general attitudes toward death and dying helped to maintain this practice. Since the nineteenth century, however, the physician has increasingly accepted more responsibility, until he has become the central figure in management of the terminally ill patient. This paper examines the evolution of the relationship between the physician and the dying patient with the intention of illuminating various factors which helped to determine that relationship.
西方医学传统建立于古典古代时期,并延续至近代早期,这一传统鼓励医生避免或拒绝治疗重病患者和/或绝症患者。文化环境以及对死亡和临终的普遍态度助长了这种做法。然而,自19世纪以来,医生承担的责任越来越多,直至成为绝症患者管理中的核心人物。本文探讨医生与临终患者关系的演变,旨在阐明有助于确定这种关系的各种因素。