Abstract
Medical interventions that cure or prevent medical conditions are central to medicine; and thus, understanding them is central to our understanding of medicine. My purpose in this paper is to explore the conceptual foundations of medicine by providing a singular analysis of the concept of a 'preventive or curative medical intervention'. Borrowing a general account of prevention from Phil Dowe (2000, 2001), I provide an analysis of prevention, cure, risk reduction, and a preventive or curative intervention, before turning to preventive and curative medical interventions. The resulting counterfactual-mechanistic account holds that preventive and curative medical interventions reduce the probability of a medical condition in an actual population compared to their counterfactual omission, commonly by disrupting an etiological or constitutive mechanism for the condition.