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2013, Texas Heart Institute Journal
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2 pages
1 file
AI-generated Abstract
The discourse on defining good health examines complex interpretations beyond the absence of illness, encompassing physical, mental, and social well-being as contextualized by socio-economic factors. Two physicians comment on Dr. Herb Fred's editorial, highlighting the evolution of health definitions, the importance of socioeconomic conditions, and the impact of health policies on overall health outcomes. Their insights emphasize that good health is a means to a fulfilling life, urging physicians to advocate for holistic understanding and actions to address the broader determinants of health.
Pan African Medical Journal
For many years the definition of 'health' has remained unchanged as a narrow concept, encompassing physical wellbeing from a medical context. This somewhat focused definition has attracted criticism from individuals and professional bodies alike. Recent attempts have been made to redefine health, each offering an alternative viewpoint from sociological, environmental, societal and economic standpoints. We summarize and contextualize these definitions and provide an alternative, new, all-encompassing definition of health.
Philosophy of Science, 1977
This paper argues that the medical conception of health as absence of disease is a value-free theoretical notion. Its main elements are biological function and statistical normality, in contrast to various other ideas prominent in the literature on health. Apart from universal environmental injuries, diseases are internal states that depress a functional ability below species-typical levels. Health as freedom from disease is then statistical normality of function, i.e., the ability to perform all typical physiological functions with at least typical efficiency. This conception of health is as value-free as statements of biological function. The view that health is essentially valueladen, held by most writers on the topic, seems to have one of two sources: an assumption that health judgments must be practical judgments about the treatment of patients, or a commitment to "positive" health beyond the absence of disease. I suggest that the assumption is mistaken, the commitment possibly misdescribed.
Perspectives, 2022
In the past good health was seen as the mere absence of disease being the sole evidence of good living. We now know that a significant part of a healthy life is not limited to physical health, but also mental and socioeconomic well being. The reasons for this are clear. The pathways to many physical illnesses are observed to share a common background. Some genetic conditions also have environmental triggers leading to diseased states. Optimal physical health can be achieved if a stable mental state is reached at no cost, with knowledge and desire for good health. Good health is simply a “feeling” of wellness by both self and medical assessment. Areas of good health are suggested to include - Health literacy, attitude toward mental health, self perception and values, cognitive abilities, occupational performance, behavior, self management strategies, social skills, family and significant relationships, physical health, sexual health, meaning and quality of life.
Journal of psychosomatic research, 2018
The concepts, health and disease, have received considerable attention in philosophy of medicine. The first goal of this paper is to demonstrate that three prominent analyses of health and disease can be synthesized if one assumes that medicine is both theoretical and practical, and, therefore, value-laden. The second goal of this paper is to give an account of one route by which evaluative and factual claims come together in medical knowledge, during medical conversations between clinicians and patients. Accomplishing these two goals together yields an epistemology of medicine that moves past debates about health and disease. On this view the conceptual foundations of medicine rest on subjective and objective claims about health states and their evaluations. By making subjective and objective claims, patients and clinicians negotiate whether patients’ health states are sufficiently dysfunctional to warrant medical intervention, leading to the formation of complementary illness narratives, which are anchored to different degrees in personal experience and medical theory. On this view, health and disease are supplanted as the conceptual foundations of medicine. Rather, medicine is better understood in terms of two basic aims: The first aim of medicine is to fully understand patients in scientific and personal terms; the second aim is to intervene upon patients' states of illness in ways that are consistent with full understanding.
Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases
Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 2014
This essay replies to critics since 1995 of my "biostatistical theory" (BST) of health. According to the BST, a pathological condition is a state of statistically species-subnormal biological part-functional ability, relative to sex and age. Theoretical health, the total absence of pathological conditions, is then a value-free scientific notion. Recent critics offer a mixture of old and new objections to this analysis. Some new ones relate to choice of reference class, situation-specificity of function, common diseases and healthy populations, improvements in population health, the practice of pathologists, "Cambridge changes" in health status, and comparative vs. absolute health concepts. I make no changes in doctrine, except to consider treating "normal aging" as pathological by taking young adults as the standard for all adults.
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