Considered the definitive history of the American health care system, The Social Transformation of American Medicine examines how the roles of doctors, hospitals, health plans, and government programs have evolved over the last two and a half centuries. How did the financially insecure medical profession of the nineteenth century become a prosperous one in the twentieth? Why was national health insurance blocked? And why are corporate institutions taking over our medical system today? Beginning in 1760 and coming up to the present day, renowned sociologist Paul Starr traces the decline of professional sovereignty in medicine, the political struggles over health care, and the rise of a corporate system.
Updated with a new preface and an epilogue analyzing developments since the early 1980s, The Social Transformation of American Medicine is a must-read for anyone concerned about the future of our fraught health care system.
"And I know that we'll never build starships / Until we tackle poverty, war, and hardship" - Sifu Hotman - Not future studies or the old Italian movement.
@jsamdrolet @BuddyYakov I'm getting all this from The Social Transformation of American Medicine by Paul Starr, well worth a read
I teach & practice Family Medicine at a mission hospital in Kenya. I also like to write about a bunch of different things.
Fascinating details here from Paul Starr's The Social Transformation of American Medicine on how the American Federation of Labor helped scuttle compulsory health insurance. https://t.co/BN9gV8Oz5X
Physician/research in primary care, homelessness, addiction. Professor, UAB. https://t.co/OKBizUZxGC… Opinions=mine
@IdiotTracker 4/The Flexner report is a milestone in what Paul Starr called the Social Transformation of American Medicine. In this process, medicine became more scientific. And the profession gained authority to define its future (and its reimbursement) and its composition