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Making a Medical Living

Making a Medical Living

Making a Medical Living

Doctors and Patients in the English Market for Medicine, 1720–1911
Anne Digby
June 2002
Available
Paperback
9780521524513

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£28.00
GBP
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    How did doctors make a living? Making a Medical Living explores the neglected socio-economic history of medical practice, beginning with the first voluntary hospital in 1720 and ending with national health insurance in 1911. It looks at public appointments in hospitals and dispensaries, office under public welfare systems, and at private practice. In this innovative study, Anne Digby makes use of new sources of information, looks at ordinary rather than élite doctors, and analyses provincial rather than metropolitan practice. From the mid-eighteenth century medicine became more commercialised; doctors travelled to see ordinary patients, developed specialisms, and were entrepreneurial in expanding institutional forms of health care. This entrepreneurial activity helped shape English medicine into a distinctive pattern of general and specialist practice, and of public and private health care.

    Product details

    June 2002
    Paperback
    9780521524513
    372 pages
    228 × 152 × 23 mm
    0.667kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • Part I. The Professional Structure of Practice:
    • 1. Medical practitioners
    • 2. The context of practice
    • 3. Medical encounters
    • Part II. The Economic Dimensions of Practice:
    • 4. The creation of surgical general practice
    • 5. The GP and the goal of prosperity
    • 6. Physicians
    • Part III. Patients and Doctors:
    • 7. Medicalisation and affluent patients
    • 8. Office, altruism and poor patients
    • 9. Expanding practice with women and child patients
    • Part IV. Synthesis: Reflections.
      Author
    • Anne Digby