Rise of the Medical Profession

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A01=Jose Parry
A01=Noel Parry
Affluent Manual Workers
Apothecary
Author_Jose Parry
Author_Noel Parry
British Medical Association
Capitation Fee
Category=NH
class stratification theory
Class Structure
collective action in British medicine
Collective Social Mobility
Contemporary Society
Dissociative Variable
Doctors
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Formation of Social Structure
General Medical Council
General Practitioner
GP
healthcare social organisation
History of Medicine
Imperative Co-ordination
Jose Parry
Junior Hospital Doctors
Life Styles
Local Insurance Committee
Medical Occupations
Medical Practitioners
Medical Profession
medical professionalisation
Medical Science
Medicine
National Health Insurance
National Health Insurance Act
National Health Insurance Scheme
National Health Service
NHS
NHS 1940s-1970s
NHS History
Noel Parry
Obstetrical Society
Occupational Associations
occupational closure
Orthodox Approaches
Poor Law Board
Poor Law Medical Officer
Power
Professional Consolidation
Professionalism
Rise of the Medical Profession
Royal Colleges
Sexual Divisions
Social Class
Social Disorganisation
Social Mobility
sociology of professions
state and medical power
Status
Status in the 1800s
The State
Upward Assimiliation
Vice Versa
Voluntary Hospitals
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367001827
  • Weight: 426g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 May 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1976 The Rise of the Medical Profession combines a sociological and historical approach to the rise of the medical profession in England. Sociologically it offers a theoretical framework which for the first time links the study of social mobility and professionalism with the theory of stratification. Historically, it examines the movement which led to the unification of the medical profession arising from effective social organisation among the surgeon-apothecaries in the early nineteenth century. It demonstrates that through the successful pursuit of the occupational strategy of professionalism the doctors have been able to raise their income and status in the community and to dominate the institutions and organisations of medical care. In their relationship with the state, they have been generally successful in securing a recognition of their privileged position. The future of the medical profession and of professionalism is discussed in the context of the changing balance between state power and that of free private occupation associations, whether of the type based on professionalism or unionism. The ideal-type conception of the middle class as essentially individualistic is challenged by the exploration of middle class collective action, particularly professionalism.

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