|
Michael's Books on Legal Issues in Integrative
Medicine
(Also Includes Legal Issues Related to Medical Spas and Wellness
Clinics and Resorts)
People often ask, "of the books you've written, which one should
I buy?" Here's a handy list with links, briefly mentioning what
each book covers:
Complementary
and Alternative Medicine. This is the first book
on the emerging moral and legal authority on which the safe and
effective practice of complementary, alternative, and integrative
health care can rest. The book covers regulatory legal issues from
licensure and malpractice (both by MD's and by holistic health providers)
to physician discipline. Originally published by Johns Hopkins University
Press in 1998, it is still timely, laying the foundation for the
major categories of legal rules applicable to integrative medicine.
Healing
at the Borderland of Medicine and Religion. This 2006 book focuses
on social, intellectual, and spiritual dimensions of integrative
care and grounds the analysis in the attendant legal, regulatory,
and institutional changes brought by integrative medicine. It will
be of interest not only to physicians and other clinicians, health
care institutions, and health care consumers, but also to scholars
in philosophy, religion, and other disciplines in the humanities.
Legal
Issues in Integrative Medicine. Here is a practice
guide for consumers, hospitals, doctors and lawyers about the legal
(and sometimes institutional) ramifications of seeking, referring
and using complementary and alternative therapies. Issues such as
malpractice liability, informed consent, and advising patients on
dietary supplements are included.
The
Practice of Intergrative Medicine: A Legal and Operation Guide.
This newest primer outlines the pitfalls, legal road-blocks, and
legal and institutional issues in bringing complementary and integrative
medicine into daily health care routines.
Beyond
Complementary Medicine: Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Health
Care and Human Evolution (2000): This follow-up book
to Complementary and Alternative Medicine: Legal Boundaries and
Regulatory Perspectives examines the legal, ethical, and regulatory
aspects of integrating cupuncture, chiropractic, naturopathy, massage
therapy, dietary supplements, energy healing, and other therapies
into conventional medical care.
Future
Medicine: Regulatory Challenges, and Therapeutic Pathways to Health
Care and Healing in Human Transformation (2003) follows
Beyond Complementary Medicine and takes the reader a bit
deeper into energy healing, synthesizing insights from the world's
great mystical traditions (the "perennial wisdom") with trends in
law and medicine. Future Medicine describes a likely evolution
of the legal system and the health care system at the crossroads
of developments in the way human beings care for body, mind, emotions,
environment, and soul.
A
Question Of Time is my novel about consciousness,
focusing on Ericksonian hypnosis and the journey within. It is based
on actual experience, but fictionalized, and gradually shows the
descent of the protagonist from external concerns into the dream
landscape of the unconscious.
And
finally, A
Friend of all Faiths, a memoir of inner and outer
life, bridging Wall Street, Berkeley, Harvard, the Iowa Writers'
Workshop, and my simultaneous life as a lawywer and a seminarian.
Here are some
reviews of these books.
|