E-Letter responses to:
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- editorial:
Randolph M. Nesse, Stephen C. Stearns, and Gilbert S. Omenn
- Medicine Needs Evolution
Science 2006; 311: 1071
[Summary]
[PDF]
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Published E-Letter responses:
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Medicine has evolution
- Harold R Zeckel
(7 March 2006)
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Medicine has evolution |
7 March 2006 |
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Harold R Zeckel, psychiatrist
Respond to this E-Letter:
Re: Medicine has evolution
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"...training in evolutionary thinking can help ...clinicians ask
useful
questions that they might not otherwise pose."
I beg to differ with this statement. Physicians are taught
evolutionary
thinking all through medical school, from why humans get hemorrhoids and
varicose veins, to the presence of accessory nipples and branchial cleft
remnants, from the presence of the appendix to the presence of the pineal
gland, etc, etc. The understanding of the manner in which cancer cells
reproduce in the body and the development of resistance among bacteria,
plus
why sickle cell anemia developed among blacks in Africa, all these are
mentioned with reference to evolution while we are taught in medical
school.
I think it is that non-physicians don't realize how prevalent evolutionary
thinking already is in the education of physicians that editorialists
think
we should be taught more about it. Of course, there is always more to
learn.
Harold Zeckel, M.D. |
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