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Volume 331:196-198 July 21, 1994 Number 3
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The Tyranny of Health

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There has recently been much in both lay and medical literature on the promotion of healthy lifestyles. Once upon a time people did not have lifestyles; they had lives. Those lives were filled with work and play, battle and respite, excitement and boredom, but principally with the day-to-day struggle for existence, centered largely around the family, birth, death, disease, and health. What is the difference between a lifestyle and a life? Central to it, I believe, is the concept that lifestyle is something one chooses, and life is something that happens to one. This distinction will affect the future of . . . [Full Text of this Article]

The Concept of Wellness

Social Responsibility for Health

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Related Letters:

The Tyranny of Health
Foxhall L. E., MacLachlan T.B., Anstadt G. W., DiPiero A., Whyte J. J., Beall D. P., Regestein Q. R., Fitzgerald F.
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N Engl J Med 1994; 331:1660-1661, Dec 15, 1994. Correspondence

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Blackburn G. L., Grand R. J., Licht D. J., Richardson B. E., Soteriades E. S., Willcutts H. D., Kassirer J. P., Angell M.
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N Engl J Med 1998; 338:1702, Jun 4, 1998. Correspondence

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