The old-fashioned doctor, whose departure from the modern medical scene
is so greatly lamented, was amply aware of each patient's per- sonality,
family, work, and way of life. Today, we often blame a doctor's absence
of that awareness on moral or ethical deficiency either in medical
education or in the character of people who become physicians. An
alternative explanation, however, is that doctors are just as moral,
ethical, and concerned as ever before, but that a vast amount of
additional new information has won the competition for attention. The
data available to the old-fashioned doctor were a patient's history,
phys- ical examination, and "personal profile," together with a limited
number of generally ineffectual therapeutic agents. A doctor today deals
with an enormous array of additional new information, which comes from
X-rays, biopsies, cytology, electrographic tracings, and the phantas-
magoria of contemporary laboratory tests, and the doctor must also be
aware of a list of therapeutic possibilities that are both far more
effective and far more extensive than ever before.