History - Cross Discipline
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Medical Services and the Hospital in Britain, 1860–1939
Steven Cherry, University of East Anglia
£46
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Rs.4048
(10% discount)
£41.40
| Rs.3643
| HB | 106 Pages
ISBN: 9780521571265
Series: New Studies in Economic and Social History, 28
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Available for: SAARC Countries only
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India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Maldives & Afghanistan
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How were the medical services organised in Britain in the years before the National Health Service? This short 1996 study looks at developments in hospital and primary medical care before World War Two focusing on service delivery and 'the sufferer's agenda' rather than on the concerns of high politics. It considers the influences shaping provision, accessibility and impact in the contexts of contingent risks and social need, health care and social policy. The author examines the recent research in this area, concluding that, despite improvements, substantial reform was an agreed point on the agenda of all interested in health care by the later 1930s, though a positive consensus had not emerged. This book will be invaluable to students and teachers approaching the subject for the first time, and includes a detailed bibliography to assist in further research.
Contents
1. Contexts 2. Medicine and its impact 3. Professionalisation and reform 4. Medical services 1860–1914 5. Rival systems or integrated services? 6. Health care finance, accountability and control Bibliography Glossary, Index. |
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