Reluctant patients: The mental health of doctors
The British medical journal The Lancet surveyed a number of studies that discuss troubling statistics on suicide and depression among American physicians. The subject is not new, but the studies...
View ArticleThe unavoidable and burdensome responsibility to be happy
I came across this photo of Victoria Huggins, of American Idol fame, while searching for an image of an annoyingly cheerful person. It was on a relatively new blog called Media Studies, written by...
View ArticleThe duty to be happy
The French intellectual Pascal Bruckner casts a critical eye on happiness in his newly translated book, Perpetual Euphoria: On the Duty to Be Happy. Much of what he has to say about happiness applies...
View ArticleIt’s better not to have children
A research article in the journal Think enumerates the reasons it’s better not to have children. Most people assume that having children is a rewarding exercise, even a necessary ingredient of a...
View ArticleWhat the Internet does to the mind and self
One of the best things I’ve read on the subject of what the Internet does to our mental processing and social interactions is Adam Gopnik’s The information, How the Internet gets inside us. It was...
View ArticleOverdiagnosed and overprotected children
There’s been much discussion for years now on whether children are overmedicated for behavioral problems. A very thoughtful report was just published by The Hastings Center: “Troubled Children:...
View ArticleDon’t drink and judge: Bitter tastes and moral disgust
Disgust is an emotion experienced – either actually or in the imagination – through the senses. Charles Darwin, for example, wrote: “I am disgusted by the stench and sight of that rotting viscera.”...
View ArticleThe emotional burdens of patient care
In a recent issue of JAMA, Dr. Michael Stillman writes about the emotional pain of delivering bad news to a patient he has known through the best and worst of times. Earlier in my career, delivering...
View ArticleBruckner on the family, being gay, and AIDS activism
I recently read and very much enjoyed Pascal Bruckner’s newly translated book, Perpetual Euphoria: On the Duty to Be Happy (originally published in 2000). Here’s a passage from the chapter “The Fat,...
View ArticleBruckner on the good life, money, and the unequal world of work
Once more, from Perpetual Euphoria: On the Duty to Be Happy. This time on our relation to wealth. Why is it American conservatives deplore European social democracy? Could it be that it doesn’t...
View ArticleRecommended (online) reading
I’m still on “sabbatical.” Mostly reading. Thinking about what I most want to write about. I know what my interests are — the problem is, I have too many. Meanwhile, here are some blogs I enjoy...
View ArticleGuest post: Is the prevalence of depression related to the modern empowerment...
Pierre Fraser is an author, essayist, and (currently) a PhD candidate in sociology at Université Laval. Just as his most recent book (Tous Malades !: Quand l’obsession pour la santé nous rend fous) was...
View ArticleOn healthism, the social determinants of health, conformity, & embracing the...
It’s always hard to be sure about these things, but I think the reason I decided to take a ‘sabbatical’ from blogging last July was that I was interested in too many seemingly unrelated topics. Writing...
View ArticleOn healthism, the social determinants of health, conformity, & embracing the...
Continued from part one, where I discussed the first three of my six interests: healthism, medicalization, and psychological and physical conformity. Click on the graphic below to see a larger image....
View ArticleOn healthism, the social determinants of health, conformity, & embracing the...
Continued from parts one and two, where I defined the terms used in the following diagram of my blogging interests. Click on the graphic for a larger image. If I had written the previous two posts a...
View ArticleOn healthism, the social determinants of health, conformity, & embracing the...
Continued from parts one, two, and three. A year ago, when I decided to call my declining rate of blogging a ‘sabbatical,’ I wrote down some questions to explore while I took time off to read. How did...
View ArticleA new blog on the self
I’ve started another blog called Basic research on the self. My intention is to write there about the social and cultural history of the self, aided by insights from sociology, anthropology, philosophy...
View ArticleJournal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences – July 2014
In the July issue of Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences: A comparison of 19th century public health measures and the contemporary approach to the AIDS pandemic The conflict between...
View ArticleThe Journal of Medicine and Philosophy — August 2014
The August issue of The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy does not have a specific theme. The nine articles address a number of quite interesting issues, among them: How existential psychotherapy can...
View ArticleRN #3: Health news: Exercise and depression. Aspirin for primary prevention....
Reading Notes #3: Some articles of interest I’ve come across while reading NEJM and JAMA. These items all fall into the category of health news. Bulleted titles in the following list link to the...
View Article
More Pages to Explore .....