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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. Personal identity - or rather the endless search for it - is the primary theme in Elliott's Better Than Well. Effectively tapping into what has become nothing short of an all-consuming fixation of self-improvement, the author delves deeply into America's perceived need to constantly repair a broken psyche by way of physical, emotional or psychological enhancement. Underscored by the infiltration of government, Elliott's insight provides readers with a broad view of what Americans believe they lack and how they go about trying to find successful solutions. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCbetrwell.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
an all-consuming fixation of self-improvement, the author delves deeply into Americas perceived need to constantly repair a broken psyche by way of physical, emotional or psychological enhancement. Underscored by
the infiltration of government, Elliotts (2004) insight provides readers with a broad view of what Americans believe they lack and how they go about trying to find successful solutions; at
the same time, however, he reveals how there is really never any fulfillment of the need for self-improvement because "society gives us no real models of the ideal life we
should be striving for" (Wolpe, 2003, p. 68). Yet what he makes crystal clear over and above everything else is how this never-ending quest toward fulfillment through artificial means
is perpetuated by the manufactured "need" to fix something that is only broken because the pharmaceutical industry says it is and has the product to prove it. As much
as American medicine has changed in recent decades, most doctors still feel as if they are in the business of curing human illnesses rather than making people feel better about
themselves. Thus, if the industry wants to sell and enhancement technology to a doctor (rather than a consumer) the technology must be transformed into a treatment. Doctors must
be convinced that the problem addressed by the technology is a medical disorder (Elliott, 2004, p. 120). The main role government plays
in the United States health services system is providing a sense of regulation that serves to avert any monopolistic attempts. Cost containment remains an elusive goal in American health
care, however, because of the myriad players within the system - not the least of which includes the government - that effectively maintain costs at the high rate, which is
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