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Incorporating Patient Knowledge in Japan and the UK - A Study of Eczema and the Steroid Controversy (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,390
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Incorporating Patient Knowledge in Japan and the UK - A Study of Eczema and the Steroid Controversy (Paperback)
Series: Routledge-WIAS Interdisciplinary Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Since the turn of the millennium, the potential for patients'
knowledge to contribute to medical knowledge has been increasingly
recognized by medical sociologists and anthropologists. Where
previously such knowledge may have been written off as 'beliefs'
and assumed to be inaccurate when it contradicted established
medical science, it is increasingly recognized that
patients-especially those with chronic conditions-can add a
valuable perspective to the clinical knowledge of medical
professionals. Sometimes this means working together to reassess
treatment priorities, and at other times it may mean a patient-led
movement to influence the direction of new research, based on
patients' experiences. Ushiyama takes the case of eczema (atopic
dermatitis)-a chronic condition with a history of patient-led
controversy over treatment methods - as a case study in how patient
knowledge has come to affect change in medical practice. Comparing
ethnographic fieldwork from Japan and the UK, she builds a complex
picture of the differences in approach to treatment in light of
attitudes to patients' knowledge.
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