The machine metaphor in medicine

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In the first part of a paper I will present at the Austrian Economics Research Conference next week, I talk about the healthcare system’s elephant in the room: how an activity that occupies 18 percent of GDP is doing so without any precise definition of health.

The lack of definition does not mean that there aren’t any prevailing notions about health.  In fact, there is one particular concept that is clearly dominant, however implicit or covert it may be: it’s the notion of health that emerges if one adopts the “machine metaphor” for the body, a metaphor that is as pervasive as could be, given that it seems to have no viable counterpart (see, for example, here).Continue reading “The machine metaphor in medicine”

Adiposopathy: is the evidence too thin?

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In the June 21 issue of JACC, Dr. Harold E. Bays argues for establishing “adiposopathy” as a full-fledged disease to provide a coherent understanding of the role of fat tissue in cardiovascular disease, dispel the confusion related to the many-named “metabolic syndrome,” and resolve the obesity paradox.  Does he succeed in this task?  What would Virchow have to say?Continue reading “Adiposopathy: is the evidence too thin?”