This book charts the journey of British General Practitioners (GPs) toward professional self-realisation through the development of a political consciousness manifested in a series of bruising encounters with the government.
This book charts the journey of British General Practitioners (GPs) toward professional self-realisation through the development of a political consciousness manifested in a series of bruising encounters with the government.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Chris Locke is currently an honorary research fellow in the Department of History at the University of Sheffield. With postgraduate degrees in History and Law, he developed his interest in medical politics during a thirty-year career advising medical practitioners on contractual and policy matters.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction 2. An Uncertain Profession: GPs' Struggle for Identity and Status in the Nineteenth Century 3. Professional Representation: 'The Battle of the Clubs' and the Fight for Autonomy 1880-1911 4. 'The Political Doctor is Now Born': Lloyd George and the Doctors' Revolt 1911-1913 5. Inauspicious Beginnings: Medical Trade Unionism the Great War and Early Attempts at Bargained Corporatism 1913-1919 6. 'Statutory Bodies with Martial Attitudes': Local Medical and Panel Committees 1913-1939 7. 'Black-coated Bolshevists': The Ministry of Health Political Brinkmanship and the 'Ideologies of Class' 1919-1926 8. The Consolidation of National Health Insurance: Administration 'Red Tape' and the Economics of Contract Practice 1926-1939 9. Parallel Developments: GPs and the 'Mixed Economy of Care' 1914-1948 10. Utopian Visions: Interwar Debates about the Future of Health Services 1920-1939 11. For Victory and Health: The Second World War the Beveridge Report and the Coming of the NHS 1939-1945 12. Facing the Future? Bevan the BMA and the Ghost of Conflicts Past 1945-1948 Conclusion: Assessing GPs' Political Activities and their Context Epilogue: The Legacy of Medical Professional Protest
1. Introduction 2. An Uncertain Profession: GPs' Struggle for Identity and Status in the Nineteenth Century 3. Professional Representation: 'The Battle of the Clubs' and the Fight for Autonomy 1880-1911 4. 'The Political Doctor is Now Born': Lloyd George and the Doctors' Revolt 1911-1913 5. Inauspicious Beginnings: Medical Trade Unionism the Great War and Early Attempts at Bargained Corporatism 1913-1919 6. 'Statutory Bodies with Martial Attitudes': Local Medical and Panel Committees 1913-1939 7. 'Black-coated Bolshevists': The Ministry of Health Political Brinkmanship and the 'Ideologies of Class' 1919-1926 8. The Consolidation of National Health Insurance: Administration 'Red Tape' and the Economics of Contract Practice 1926-1939 9. Parallel Developments: GPs and the 'Mixed Economy of Care' 1914-1948 10. Utopian Visions: Interwar Debates about the Future of Health Services 1920-1939 11. For Victory and Health: The Second World War the Beveridge Report and the Coming of the NHS 1939-1945 12. Facing the Future? Bevan the BMA and the Ghost of Conflicts Past 1945-1948 Conclusion: Assessing GPs' Political Activities and their Context Epilogue: The Legacy of Medical Professional Protest
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