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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page reaction essay that summarizes and provides a brief response to an essay by Allen Macurdy, who was diagnosed as having muscular dystrophy at age 8. The focus of Macurdy’s essay is on his relation to healthcare providers and the writer discusses the implications of his testimony. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khmsvic.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
His essay "Mastery of Life" records not only Macurdys relationship to MS and it is like to have a chronic, potentially fatal disease, but he also relates how he has
been influenced and treated by the medical profession. Therefore, the most striking feature of Macurdys essay is not simply the negative effects of MS, but also how well-meaning, but misguided,
health practitioners have made his life more complicated, rather than providing the kind of help that Macurdy actually desires and needs. First of all, a point that stands out
in Macurdys account of his childhood and adolescence is the fact that the stages of life outlining in Eriksons model of personality development remain quite applicable to this authors psychological
needs. In relating the fact that MS made him dependent on others, what stands out in Macurdys mind is how this made him feel that the time. He observes, "To
a teenager, reliance upon other people, particularly adults, is the perpetuation of childhood...(and) to be an adult is to have achieved the perfection of independence" (Macurdy 10). This statement suggests
that healthcare practitioners aiding adolescents with MS should strive, as much as possible, to facilitate their independence and recognize this developmental need. A particularly traumatic event in Macurdys life
was when a respiratory infection became severe and his doctors prescribed the use of an iron lung to aid ventilation. Macurdy describes how the medical model, which is impersonal in
its orientation, completely failed him as "no one was listening to him, and "no one seemed to be aware that...(he) existed beyond the data" posted on his chart (Macurdy 11).
The complete lack of human consideration shown by the hospitals residents angered the nurse assigned to his case (Macurdy 12). Although Macurdy was 27 at the time, he was never
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