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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
The Impossible Clinic explores the conundrum of evidence-based medicine's (EBM) attempt to translate evidence from medical research into recommendations for practice. Ironically, when medical institutions combine disciplinary regulations with EBM to produce clinical practice guidelines, the outcomes are antithetical to the aim. Such guidelines fail to increase individual physicians' capacity to judge - as EBM promises - because they externalize judgment while imposing disciplinary control. The Impossible Clinic is the first book to interrogate the history, practice, and pitfalls of EBM and how it persists due to intersecting relationships between professional medical regulation and liberal governance strategies.
Contents:
Introduction
1 Conversations in Medicine: Problematizing Clinical Practice
2 Institutional Sites: McMaster University and Canada's Contribution to Medical Training
3 Responsibilizing a New Kind of Clinician: Problem-Based Learning
4 Technologies of Regulation: Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Effects of Normalization
5 The Impossible Clinic: Biopolitics, Governmentality, Liberalism
Conclusion
Notes; References; Index
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
Publication date: April, 2020
Pages: 256
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Diseases and Disorders, General Issues