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Reviews for Inside Chiropractic: A Patient's Guide

 Inside Chiropractic magazine reviews

The average rating for Inside Chiropractic: A Patient's Guide based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-04-11 00:00:00
1999was given a rating of 4 stars Sydney Schanberg
Very good book and useful information. He doesn't bash the profession, but explains how it works- good and bad.
Review # 2 was written on 2008-11-16 00:00:00
1999was given a rating of 4 stars Robert Nadeau
This book was painful to read, not because it was dense (though it is fairly dense and quite detailed), but because its subject matter is a topic that is deeply triggering for me as a victim of infant circumcision in the US, which picked up its practice of infant circumcision from the British and from the same cultural forces that led to it in Britain, but where the practice never died out. I learned a lot about the history of 19th Century medicine and the development of a number of fad quack surgical practices due to the fact that anesthetics and antiseptic technique made routine surgery practical a generation before doctors had either a particularly clear understanding of the germ theory of disease or effective drug-based therapies. This fad, along with pre-germ-theory medical ideas, such as the "nerve force" theory that was the basis for the belief that masturbation could cause blindness or other nervous system issues, played a significant role in the spread of medicalized circumcision. I do wish Darby discussed at more length how routine circumcision managed to die out in Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, but what he does have to say on this topic was quite interesting, because it contradicted the one explanation I'd heard in the past: that universal, government-subsidized healthcare meant there was a political interest in stopping paying for and performing a pointless surgery. Darby contends that the elimination of routine circumcision in the UK was eased by the fact that it primarily only became common among the upper classes--who could afford the level of medical care that resulted in it--and did not persist so long that society and the medical community entirely forgot how the natural penis worked. It did become common across class lines in the colonies of Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, but their greater connections to the British medical community meant that the British rejection of the practice had more influence there than in the US. In any case, it seems that in all cases where routine medicalized circumcision was adopted and then rejected, the rejection was led by the medical community rather than by parents, which--given how stridently pro-genital-mutilation the American medical community continues to be--makes it hard for me to have much hope that there will be improvement here any time soon.


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