1st Edition

The Doctor's Job

By Carl Binger Copyright 1946
244 Pages
by Routledge

244 Pages
by Routledge

Originally published in 1946, The Doctor’s Job is an account of changes in medicine over the decades, focusing on the rapid expansion of medical science and the development of specialties. Carl Binger, a distinguished psychiatrist and physician and pioneer in psychosomatic medicine, reflects on the ethical, emotional, and intellectual challenges faced by doctors at the time and the evolving... Read more

The Oath of Hippocrates.  Foreword.  Introduction.  1. Background and Changes  2. Specialties and Specialists  3. The Choice of the Physician, Medical Fees and Etiquette  4. The Relationship of Doctor and Patient  5. Medicine and Psychoanalysis  6. Psychiatry and Medicine  7. Some Common Psychiatric Problems  8. Psychosomatic Medicine or Mind and Body Relationships  9. Stomach Ulcer  10. Allergy, Asthma and Tuberculosis  11. High Blood Pressure  12. The Cure and Control of Disease  13. Recent Achievements and Tasks Ahead  14. Convalescence and Chronic Disease  15. The Prevention of Illness  16. Office Practice, Hospitals and Outpatient Departments  17. Socialized Medicine or Paying the Piper  18. Past, Present and Future.  Bibliography.  Index.

Biography

Carl Binger (1889–1976) was an American psychiatrist and the author of articles and books about the practice of medicine. Binger grew up in New York City and attended Harvard College (1906) and Harvard Medical School (1914), after which he served as a doctor in World War I and in a Red Cross mission to combat a Typhus epidemic in Macedonia. During the 1920s he was a research pathologist at the Rockefeller Institute, where he became interested in the psychological aspects of illness and health. Binger then studied psychiatry in London, Heidelberg and, in Zurich, under Dr. Carl Jung and registered as a psychiatrist in 1946. He gave psychiatric evidence as a defense witness in the 1949 Alger Hiss trials. Binger was professor of clinical psychiatry at the Cornell University Medical School, and later consultant in psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. He was a founder of the American Psychosomatic Society and editor in chief of Psychosomatic Medicine.