Professional Dominance
Author : Eliot Freidson
Publisher : Transaction Publishers
Page : 256 pages
File Size : 50,47 MB
Release :
Category :
ISBN : 0202368262
Author : Eliot Freidson
Publisher : Transaction Publishers
Page : 256 pages
File Size : 50,47 MB
Release :
Category :
ISBN : 0202368262
Author : Oliver Quick
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 225 pages
File Size : 34,89 MB
Release : 2017-03-16
Category : Law
ISBN : 0521190991
This illuminating study explores the role of professionals, patients, regulation and law in improving patient safety.
Author : W. Richard Scott
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Page : 454 pages
File Size : 47,22 MB
Release : 2000-05
Category : Medical
ISBN : 0226743101
The changes in the US healthcare system since World War II are documented here, from new technologies, service-delivery arrangements, to financing mechanisms and underlying sets of organizing principles. The authors illustrate the work with five types of healthcare organizations.
Author : Robert A. Manners
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 272 pages
File Size : 11,88 MB
Release : 2017-07-05
Category : Medical
ISBN : 1351496417
In the United States today we are confronted by a number of serious social problems, not the least of which concern the character of our basic human services. In each of the broad public domains of welfare, education, law, and health there are crises of public confidence. Each in its own way is failing to accomplish its essential mission of alleviating material deprivation, instructing the young, controlling and righting criminal and civil wrongs, and healing the sick. The poor, the student, the offender and the victim, the sick-all have in some way protested the failure of the institutions responsible for them. And these protests occur at a time when the human services are absorbing an increasingly massive amount of money and manpower. Awareness of that crisis intensified in the second half of the twentieth century. Increasing energy has been invested in research designed to determine what can be done. Each of the human services has long had its own research tradition, but during the sixties each has also made a concerted effort to mobilize and use the skills of such comparatively new disciplines as sociology. Owing to these new demands, sociology itself has grown. The hitherto obscure specialties of the sociology of law and medicine and the established specialties of criminology and educational sociology have taken on new vigor. In applying themselves the task of studying the human services, however, these segments of sociology have had to choose between two different strategies. Rather than dealing with the details of the human services for their own sake-and this lack of detail in a characteristic limitation of the second approach-this book shall instead attempt to stand outside the system in order to delineate one of its critical assumptions and a strategic feature of its basic structure. This book deals with the concept of profession, for the concept rests on assumptions about how services to laymen should be controlled and is realized by a special kind of
Author : Institute of Medicine
Publisher : National Academies Press
Page : 580 pages
File Size : 27,21 MB
Release : 1986-01-01
Category : Medical
ISBN : 0309036437
"[This book is] the most authoritative assessment of the advantages and disadvantages of recent trends toward the commercialization of health care," says Robert Pear of The New York Times. This major study by the Institute of Medicine examines virtually all aspects of for-profit health care in the United States, including the quality and availability of health care, the cost of medical care, access to financial capital, implications for education and research, and the fiduciary role of the physician. In addition to the report, the book contains 15 papers by experts in the field of for-profit health care covering a broad range of topicsâ€"from trends in the growth of major investor-owned hospital companies to the ethical issues in for-profit health care. "The report makes a lasting contribution to the health policy literature." â€"Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law.
Author : Eddie Epstein
Publisher : Potomac Books
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 36,96 MB
Release : 2002
Category : Football teams
ISBN : 9781574884661
Takes an objective look at what constitutes historical greatness on the gridiron
Author : Michael Adas
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 566 pages
File Size : 41,6 MB
Release : 2009
Category : History
ISBN : 9780674020078
Long before the United States became a major force in global affairs, Americans believed in their superiority over others due to their inventiveness, productivity, and economic and social well-being. U.S. expansionists assumed a mandate to civilize non-Western peoples by demanding submission to American technological prowess and design. As an integral part of America's national identity and sense of itself in the world, this civilizing mission provided the rationale to displace the Indians from much of our continent, to build an island empire in the Pacific and Caribbean, and to promote unilateral--at times military--interventionism throughout Asia. In our age of smart bombs and mobile warfare, technological aptitude remains preeminent in validating America's global mission. Michael Adas brilliantly pursues the history of this mission through America's foreign relations over nearly four centuries from North America to the Philippines, Vietnam, and the Persian Gulf. The belief that it is our right and destiny to remake foreign societies in our image has endured from the early decades of colonization to our current crusade to implant American-style democracy in the Muslim Middle East. Dominance by Design explores the critical ways in which technological superiority has undergirded the U.S.'s policies of unilateralism, preemption, and interventionism in foreign affairs and raised us from an impoverished frontier nation to a global power. Challenging the long-held assumptions and imperatives that sustain the civilizing mission, Adas gives us an essential guide to America's past and present role in the world as well as cautionary lessons for the future.
Author : Eliot Freidson
Publisher : Yale University Press
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 35,76 MB
Release : 1989-01-01
Category : Medical
ISBN : 9780300041583
Present-day health care policies in the United States are moving toward a system in which patients will be treated like industrial objects by doctors forced to work mechanically, says the distinguished medical sociologist Eliot Freidson in Medical Work in America. He offers a number of controversial proposals designed both to reduce costs and to avoid such dehumanization. In a series of essays that includes some of his classic work as well as significant new material, Freidson discusses the doctor-patient relationship, relations between physicians in various forms of medical practice, and the forces now reorganizing medical work. He shows how increasingly restrictive health insurance contracts insert a new, problematic element into both doctor-patient and colleague relations, and how bureaucratic methods of controlling medical decisions affect those relations. Finally, Freidson advances some basic principles to guide health care policy. He emphasizes that the physician's freedom to exercise discretion is essential if patients are to be treated as individuals rather than as administratively defined diagnostic categories. His recommendations include eliminating fee-for-service compensation, controlling health industry profits, and limiting the external administrative regulation of medical decisions while organizing medical work in such a way as to maximize effective and responsible self-governance.
Author : Thomas B. Lawrence
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 337 pages
File Size : 18,90 MB
Release : 2009-07-16
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 0521518555
This book contains a series of essays and empirical case studies exploring the nature of institutional work.
Author : Barry Eaton
Publisher : Dogwise Publishing
Page : 87 pages
File Size : 39,75 MB
Release : 2011
Category : Pets
ISBN : 1617810231
Bring science to the discussion of whether dogs try to "dominate" humans. The fact is that domestic dogs have been selectively bred for hundreds of years to work cooperatively with people and this book corrects common misconceptions about canine behavior.