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Journal ArticleDOI

Corporatization and the Social Transformation of Doctoring

John B. McKinlay, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1988 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 2, pp 191-205
TLDR
The major theoretical explanations of the social transformation of medical work under advanced capitalism are outlined and the adequacy of the prevailing view of professionalism (Freidson's notion of professional dominance) is considered, and an alternative view is offered.
Abstract
Corporatization of health care is dramatically transforming the medical workplace and profoundly altering the everyday work of the doctor. In this article, the authors discuss recent changes in U.S. health care and their impact on doctoring, and outline the major theoretical explanations of the social transformation of medical work under advanced capitalism. The adequacy of the prevailing view of professionalism (Freidson's notion of professional dominance) is considered, and an alternative view, informed by recent changes, is offered. While the social transformation of doctoring is discussed with reference to recent U.S. experience, no country or health system can be considered immune. Indeed, U.S. experience may be instructive for doctors and health care researchers in other national settings as to what they may expect.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Medicalization and Social Control

Peter Conrad
- 01 Jan 1992 - 
TL;DR: The authors examines the major conceptual issues concerning medicalization and social control, emphasizing studies published on the topic since 1980, including the emergence, definition, contexts, process, degree, range, consequences, critiques, and future of medicalisation and demedicalization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomedicalization: Technoscientific transformations of health, illness, and U.S. biomedicine.

TL;DR: Biomedicalization describes the increasingly complex, multisited, multidirectional processes of medicalization, both extended and reconstituted through the new social forms of highly technoscientific biomedicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic professional boundaries in the healthcare workforce.

TL;DR: The purpose of this paper is to describe four directions in which the existing workforce can change: diversification; specialisation and vertical and horizontal substitution, and to discuss the implications of these changes for the workforce.
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Perspective---Professional Work: The Emergence of Collaborative Community

TL;DR: It is argued that professional community is mutating from a Gemeinschaft, craft guild form, via Gesellschaft forms, toward a new, collaborative form, which is a difficult one, and the outcome is uncertain.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Labor and Monopoly Capital

Harry Braverman
- 01 Jul 1974 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the structure of the working class and the manner in which it had changed in the United States were investigated. But the details of this process, especially its historical turning points and the shape of the new employment that was taking the place of the old, were not clear to me, and since these things had not yet been clarified in any comprehensive fashion, there was a need for a more substantial historical description and analysis of the process of occupational change than had yet been presented in print.
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The social transformation of American medicine

TL;DR: A Sovereign ProfessionThe Rise of Medical Authority and the Shaping of the Medical System and the Social Origins of Professional Sovereignty are discussed.
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Medicine as an Institution of Social Control

TL;DR: It is shown that medicine is becoming a major institution of social control, nudging aside, if not incorporating, the more traditional institutions of religion and law, and is becoming the new repository of truth.
Journal ArticleDOI

The new medical-industrial complex

TL;DR: Closer attention from the public and the profession, and careful study, are necessary to ensure that the "medical-industrial complex" puts the interests of the pub...
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards the proletarianization of physicians.

TL;DR: Physicians are slowly being reduced to a proletarian function, and their formerly self-interested activities subordinated to the broader requirements of the capitalist control of highly profitable medical production.