Best of
Medicine

1976

Physical Examination of the Spine and Extremities


Stanley Hoppenfeld - 1976
    Useful to students and clinicians, this text covers the process of physical examination of the spine and extremities.

Mortal Lessons: Notes on the Art of Surgery


Richard Selzer - 1976
    Selzer describes unsparingly the surgeon’s art. Both moving and perversely funny, Mortal Lessons is an established classic that considers not only the workings and misworkings of the human body but also the meaning of life and death. With a Preface written by the Author especially for this edition.

Medically Important Fungi: A Guide to Identification


Davise H. Larone - 1976
    This work is an easy-to-use book that helps laboratory workers identify fungal pathogens under the microscope by their morphology and other readily identifiable features.

The Theology of Medicine


Thomas Szasz - 1976
    s/t: The Political-philosophical Foundations of Medical Ethics

The Body is the Hero


Ronald J. Glasser - 1976
    Reading like a scientific thriller, the book intertwines science with history to describe the discoveries and flashes of brilliance of men such as Semmelweise and Pasteur, and the modern-day struggles of doctors and researchers to pry out why the immune system saves one person and kills another. The book also recounts a

White Coat, Clenched Fist: The Political Education of an American Physician


Fitzhugh Mullan - 1976
    While in medical school, Mullan was shocked by gaps in what the students learned, and the lack of humanity in the classroom. Later, Dr. Mullan was outraged at the conditions he discovered when he began to practice. He helped found the Student Health Organization, organized the Controversial Medical Collective at Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx, and struggled to offer improved medical care to those who needed it most and could afford it least.This landmark book charts the state of medical school and practices in the 1960s and 70s. This new edition is updated with a preface in which Dr. Mullan reflects on the changes in the medical field over the last thirty-plus years.Fitzhugh Mullan is Murdock Head Professor of Medicine and Health Policy at George Washington University. He worked at the U.S. Public Health Service where he attained the rank of Assistant Surgeon General (1991-1996). Dr. Mullan is the co-founder of the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship and the author of numerous books, including Plagues and Politics: The Story of the United States Public Health Service, and his most recent book, Narrative Matters: The Power of the Personal Essay in Health Policy.