Consciousness, Liberation, and Health Delivery Systems

Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 7 (2):135-152 (1982)
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Abstract

Written from the perspective of philosophy of liberation, this essay holds that the reform of basic human relationships and their cultural instantiation(s) is central to all serious societal change. The essay analyzes naive, mythological, and critical consciousness. It examines how these modes of consciousness are embodied in the health delivery system and then describes areas where practitioners and patients of critical consciousness might work for greater humanization of health care

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