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Contentsred barHeroes of Medicinebar
Blk Bar Heroes of Medicine
A Childs Pain
The Plant Hunter
In Search of Sight
A Dark Inheritance
Too Big a Heart
Seeing the Future
The Tumor War
The $28 foot
Drop Your Guns
The Wired Prairie
To Hell and Back
Beyond the Call
Bloodless Surgery
Rescue in Sudan
Physician Heal Thyself
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EARLY GREEK DOCTORS INSISTED THAT THE CAUSES OF DISEASE NOT BE ATTRIBUTED TO DISPLEASED AND VENGEFUL GODS

A year ago, a special issue of TIME highlighted some of the biomedical advances of the late 20th century. This 1997 issue celebrates men and women who have contributed to those advances. Not all of the assemblage of healers presented here are doctors. Nurses, technical personnel and seekers of botanical remedies have also found the limelight. So has one committed American woman who donated her bone marrow to a desperately sick person whom she had never met. When she was asked what moved her to come forward, and how she could tolerate the weeks of soreness and fatigue that follow the marrow harvesting, her reply was unassuming. She did it, she says, because "there's no choice. You're talking about saving somebody's life."

Though she is not a healer by profession, the altruistic donor is imbued with the same stimulus, the same motivation, that has driven medical pioneers throughout history. The force that leads men and women to devote their lives to those who need help is their simple realization that, for them personally, there is no choice. More than a career, this has been their calling.

No matter what other goals it may achieve, the medical profession has always maintained as its ultimate mission the relief of human suffering. Though the greatest of medical innovators have made their most important contributions for any combination of personal and professional reasons, the background against which their motivations play has never changed. It remains what it has been since earliest times: the constant mindfulness that individual people are enduring the effects of disease and that only through the intervention of others can their problems be addressed.

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| 2,397 Years of Progress |