Based on a study of fourteen families in which a child had
contracted paralytic poliomyelitis. Passage Through Crisis: Polio
Victims and Their Families, first published in 1963, was widely
praised for its penetrating--and, for its time,
innovative--analyses of doctor-patient communications, and for its
interpreta-tion of the meaning of physical disability in American
society.
In his new opening essay, Davis reflects on the enduring sources
of this profound problem in human relations as well as on those
changes in the culture of American health care that are helping to
restructure doctor-patient relations along more open, less
authoritarian lines. The emergence of patient self-help groups, the
political militancy of the Gay community in regard to AIDS, and the
fading of the early post-World War II naive faith in the
humanitarian efficacy of science are some of the developments dealt
with. A parallel discussion of the importation into medical
sociology of such concepts as the reality-structuring power of
professional discourse and of the meta-phoric significance of
different diseases for different historical eras seeks to relate
developments in the culture of health care to sociology's
study.
Passage Through Crisis retains for today's readers that
essential quality that most engaged readers of a quarter century
ago: its vivid and probing ethno-graphic account of the impact of
serious illness on the family, the difficult processes of
adjustment that ensue and, in these connections, the role played
(and toll exacted) by American values.
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