The Involvement of the Behavioral Sciences in American Medicine: A Historical Perspective
- 1 October 1981
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Journal of Health Services
- Vol. 11 (4) , 583-596
- https://doi.org/10.2190/w1p9-3hr6-u9e3-4jcw
Abstract
This paper discusses the medical profession's underlying motivations in initiating recent changes in medical education in the United States. The first part briefly examines the transition from a holistic to a scientific theory and practice in American medicine. The second part of the paper analyzes and interprets the increasing incorporation of behavioral scientists into medical education in recent decades. A review of the debate on reforms in medical education, appearing in The Journal of the American Medical Association since the 1940s, indicates that the primary function of these behavioral scientists is to provide future physicians with techniques for managing problems in the physician-patient relationship. The concluding interpretation is that behavioral science expertise is actually used to strengthen and legitimize the traditional status of the medical profession in the existing structure of health care delivery.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Larger Perspective on the Flexner ReportInternational Journal of Health Services, 1975
- Convergences and divergences: Anthropology and sociology in health careSocial Science & Medicine (1967), 1975
- Teaching behavioral sciences in schools of medicine: Observations on some Latin-American schoolsSocial Science & Medicine (1967), 1975
- Professionalism and Social Control in the Progressive Era: The Case of the Flexner ReportSocial Problems, 1974
- Health Planning as a Managerial IdeologyInternational Journal of Health Services, 1973
- The Problem with Social ProblemsPolitics & Society, 1971
- Issues and problems in the teaching of social science in health professional schoolsSocial Science & Medicine (1967), 1970
- Teaching activities of social scientists in medical and public health schoolsSocial Science & Medicine (1967), 1968
- Behavioral Scientists in Schools of MedicineJournal of Health and Human Behavior, 1961
- Scientific Productivity and Academic Organization in Nineteenth Century MedicineAmerican Sociological Review, 1960