Shows how the insurance industry and the medical industrial complex are the major influences in the health policy of the United States. This volume shows how the United States could indeed provide comprehensive and universal health benefits coverage to the majority of the US population at lower costs than the available health care nonsystem.
Shows how the insurance industry and the medical industrial complex are the major influences in the health policy of the United States. This volume shows how the United States could indeed provide comprehensive and universal health benefits coverage to the majority of the US population at lower costs than the available health care nonsystem.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Preface Victor W. Sidel Introduction J. Warren Salmon PART 1: Background and Current Issues The "Corporatization" of U.S. Hospitals: What Can We Learn from the Nineteenth Century Industrial Experience? William D. White Walk-In Chains: The Proprietarization of Ambulatory Care Howard S. Berliner and Robb K. Burlage The Profitization of Health Promotion Nancy Milio The Corporate Compromise: A Marxist View of Health Maintenance Organizations and Prospective Payment David U. Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler PART 2: Implications for the Medical Profession Reflections on Modern Doctoring John D. Stoeckle The Futures of Physicians: Agency and Autonomy Reconsidered J. Warren Salmon, William D. White and Joe Feinglass The Use of Medical Management Information Systems to Increase the Clinical Productivity of Physicians Joe Feinglass and J. Warren Salmon The Changing Character of the Medical Profession: A Theoretical Overview Donald Light and Sol Levine Professional Dominance or Proletarianization? Neither Vicente Navarro The Changing Doctor-Patient Relationship and Performance Monitoring: An Agency Perspective William D. White, J. Warren Salmon and Joe Feinglass Canadian Medicine: Dominance or Proletarianization? David Coburn Epilogue Vicente Navarro Contributors Index
Preface Victor W. Sidel Introduction J. Warren Salmon PART 1: Background and Current Issues The "Corporatization" of U.S. Hospitals: What Can We Learn from the Nineteenth Century Industrial Experience? William D. White Walk-In Chains: The Proprietarization of Ambulatory Care Howard S. Berliner and Robb K. Burlage The Profitization of Health Promotion Nancy Milio The Corporate Compromise: A Marxist View of Health Maintenance Organizations and Prospective Payment David U. Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler PART 2: Implications for the Medical Profession Reflections on Modern Doctoring John D. Stoeckle The Futures of Physicians: Agency and Autonomy Reconsidered J. Warren Salmon, William D. White and Joe Feinglass The Use of Medical Management Information Systems to Increase the Clinical Productivity of Physicians Joe Feinglass and J. Warren Salmon The Changing Character of the Medical Profession: A Theoretical Overview Donald Light and Sol Levine Professional Dominance or Proletarianization? Neither Vicente Navarro The Changing Doctor-Patient Relationship and Performance Monitoring: An Agency Perspective William D. White, J. Warren Salmon and Joe Feinglass Canadian Medicine: Dominance or Proletarianization? David Coburn Epilogue Vicente Navarro Contributors Index
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