Social Service and the Art of Healing: By Richard C. CabotMoffat,Yard, 1909 - 192 páginas |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 6
Página
... naturally out of the newer educational and preventive work which is being recognized to - day as the core of medical helpfulness to the public as a whole . To fool a patient is tyranny , not guidance . He must understand what is being ...
... naturally out of the newer educational and preventive work which is being recognized to - day as the core of medical helpfulness to the public as a whole . To fool a patient is tyranny , not guidance . He must understand what is being ...
Página 39
... naturally approach its definition - beginning with negatives . ( a ) We may assume in the first place that , in the evolution of the conception of philanthropy , we have left behind the stage at which a fair sample of the morning's work ...
... naturally approach its definition - beginning with negatives . ( a ) We may assume in the first place that , in the evolution of the conception of philanthropy , we have left behind the stage at which a fair sample of the morning's work ...
Página 105
... Naturally enough the interdependen- cies which I have been pointing out are tending to bring together again the doctor and the social worker , whose now divided functions were once united , and to empha- size for them both the ...
... Naturally enough the interdependen- cies which I have been pointing out are tending to bring together again the doctor and the social worker , whose now divided functions were once united , and to empha- size for them both the ...
Página 179
... naturally as the physician concentrates attention upon a part . " What's missing here of the essentials of a human life ? " asks the social worker . No matter whether her job is in a factory ( as welfare worker or factory nurse ) , in ...
... naturally as the physician concentrates attention upon a part . " What's missing here of the essentials of a human life ? " asks the social worker . No matter whether her job is in a factory ( as welfare worker or factory nurse ) , in ...
Página 181
... didn't and couldn't do before . Naturally he will resent this indignantly . A doctor is treating a young girl - quite unsuccessfully - for insomnia . A social 66 worker discovers through a home visit that she is THE ART OF HEALING 181.
... didn't and couldn't do before . Naturally he will resent this indignantly . A doctor is treating a young girl - quite unsuccessfully - for insomnia . A social 66 worker discovers through a home visit that she is THE ART OF HEALING 181.
Outras edições - Ver todos
Social Service and the Art of Healing: By Richard C. Cabot Richard Clarke Cabot Prévia não disponível - 2018 |
Termos e frases comuns
angina pectoris answer asked background believe blindness causes chapter character charity chiefly child-study cial common cure deal dependence diagnosis and treatment diphtheria disease doctor and patient doctor and social drug educator effect environment expert eyes fact foreground friends gastric cancer girl give habits hand harm heard heart Helen Bosanquet hospital human hygiene ignorance illness impression knowledge labor less lizard look Massachusetts General Hospital matter medicine ment mental merely Methylene Blue mind moral neighbor ness neurasthenia neurasthenics never nurses philanthropy phthisis physi physical physician placebos poor problems profession prognosis psychical relationship relief Religious ecstasies scientific sick Sir Frederick Treves smallpox social worker souls spiritual stomach trouble sufferer symptom teach teacher tell the truth thing tient tion told treat true Truth and Falsehood tuberculosis veracity wife worry yellow fever
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 13 - Then shall he answer them, saying, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me. And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.
Página 14 - What would we really know the meaning of? The meal in the firkin; the milk in the pan; the ballad in the street; the news of the boat; the glance of the eye; the form and the gait of the body...
Página 120 - When you are thinking of telling a lie,' said the teacher, 'ask yourself whether it is simply and solely for the patient's benefit that you are going to tell it. If you are sure that you are acting for his good and not for your own profit, you can go ahead with a clear conscience.
Página 4 - Street, approaches, and sits down to tell me the tale of his sufferings; the chances are ten to one that I shall look out of my eyes and see, not Abraham Cohen, but a Jew; not the sharp, clear outlines of this unique sufferer, but the vague, misty composite photograph of all the hundreds of Jews who in the past ten years have shuffled up to me with bent back and deprecating eyes, and taken their seats upon this same stool to tell their story. I see a Jew, — a nervous, complaining, whimpering Jew,...
Página 14 - One of the illusions is that the present hour is not the critical, decisive hour. Write it on your heart that every day is the best day in the year. No man has learned anything rightly until he knows that every day is Doomsday.
Página 50 - He must hold his position and command respect as an expert, as a teacher, or as a pupil. He needs all the virtues no more and no less than the railroad man, the farmer, or the shopkeeper. But his first and chief duty to all men is to give, with such ripening sympathy and friendliness as is possible under the circumstances, the benefit of his expert skill, and so fulfill his special function in the community.
Página 161 - The majority of placebos are given because we believe the patient . . . has learned to expect medicine for every symptom, and without it he simply won't get well. True, but who taught him to expect a medicine for every symptom? He was not born with that expectation.
Página 82 - ... chary of presuming to prescribe for the individual or interfere in any way with the course of treatment outlined by the physician once he has had an opportunity to act. "The social worker should be," as Dr. RC Cabot says, "chiefly an educator, nurturer, stimulator, developer and director of human souls in that group of persons whose character, temperament or environment has brought them into some sort of trouble.
Página 55 - The one definite problem always before her is "the study of character under adversity and of the influences that mold it for good or ill.
Página 162 - He was not born with that expectation. ... It is we physicians who are responsible for perpetuating false ideas about disease and its cure With every placebo that we give we do our part in perpetuating error, and harmful error at that.