P.C., M.D.
Book Details
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She argues that radical feminism and race-obsessed multiculturalism have no place in the world of medicine. When they have actually secured a place, Satel shows the harm they've done. She describes, for instance, how the Harvard School of Public Health teaches that racial discrimination causes hypertension among African Americans--in short, racism makes you sick. Yet there's no credible evidence to back this startling claim, which may in fact divert attention away from behavioral steps that really can lower blood pressure. Satel has a wonderfully clever term for the people advancing this type of lab-jacket hokum: "indoctrinologist." Theirs is a political vocation, not a medical one. Satel is adept at countering their offensive, but her voice is a lonely one:
Indoctrinologists are making steady inroads in medicine. They now sit at the helm of professional associations and hold impressive posts in schools of public health. They have changed medical school admissions criteria and have infiltrated respected academic journals. They are outspoken, if not shrill, participants in many legislative and political debates.... Their numbers and influence are growing.That's the bad news. The good news is that Satel has written an outstanding book that exposes their agenda. --John J. Miller
