Quack Medicine: A History of Combating Health Fraud in Twentieth-Century America

Quack Medicine: A History of Combating Health Fraud in Twentieth-Century America

by Eric W. Boyle
Quack Medicine: A History of Combating Health Fraud in Twentieth-Century America

Quack Medicine: A History of Combating Health Fraud in Twentieth-Century America

by Eric W. Boyle

Hardcover

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Overview

This timely volume illustrates how and why the fight against quackery in modern America has largely failed, laying the blame on an unlikely confluence of scientific advances, regulatory reforms, changes in the medical profession, and the politics of consumption.

Throughout the 20th century, anti-quackery crusaders investigated, exposed, and attempted to regulate allegedly fraudulent therapeutic approaches to health and healing under the banner of consumer protection and a commitment to medical science. Quack Medicine: A History of Combating Health Fraud in Twentieth-Century America reveals how efforts to establish an exact border between quackery and legitimate therapeutic practices and medications have largely failed, and details the reasons for this failure.

Digging beneath the surface, the book uncovers the history of allegedly fraudulent therapies including pain medications, obesity and asthma cures, gastrointestinal remedies, virility treatments, and panaceas for diseases such as arthritis, asthma, diabetes, and HIV/AIDS. It shows how efforts to combat alleged medical quackery have been connected to broader debates among medical professionals, scientists, legislators, businesses, and consumers, and it exposes the competing professional, economic, and political priorities that have encouraged the drawing of arbitrary, vaguely defined boundaries between good medicine and "quack medicine."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313385674
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 01/09/2013
Series: Healing Society: Disease, Medicine, and History
Pages: 239
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.10(d)
Age Range: 1 - 17 Years

About the Author

Eric W. Boyle, PhD, is guest researcher in the Office of History at the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.

Table of Contents

Series Foreword ix

Acknowledgments xi

Abbreviations xiii

Introduction xv

Chapter 1 Quackery Unmasked 1

Chapter 2 Rationalizing and Regulating the Therapeutic Marketplace 17

Chapter 3 Marketing Medicines in an Age of Reform 39

Chapter 4 Propaganda for Reform 61

Chapter 5 A New Deal for Quackery 91

Chapter 6 Redefining Quackery in the Age of Wonder Drugs 111

Chapter 7 Reviving the Antiquackery Crusade in the 1950s and 1960s 127

Chapter 8 Redefining Quackery in the Closing Decades of the Twentieth Century 151

Notes 179

Selected Bibliography 219

Index 231

What People are Saying About This

Ronald L. Numbers

"Simply put, Eric Boyle’s Quack Medicine is the best historical survey of “quackery” in America. Focusing on efforts to control—indeed, squash—quackery, which included most patent medicines and the various incarnations of sectarian practice, he even-handedly explores the dominant and sometimes hypocritical role played by the American Medical Association, which condemned alternative forms of treatment while greedily publishing their advertisements in its journal. In the latter decades of the twentieth century government agencies increasingly eclipsed the AMA in attempting to regulate the diverse medical marketplace."

Gregory J. Higby

"Boyle pulls few punches in Quack Medicine and lands many. His cogent analysis of the history and impact of quackery in the USA should be required reading for policy makers. He supports well his contention that education is not enough to protect the public from fraudulent purveyors of 'health.'"

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