Money, Medicine, and Malpractice in American Society
By (Author) Iain M. Hay
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th April 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Law of torts, damages and compensation
Social welfare and social services
Insurance and actuarial studies
347.306332
Hardback
280
The author argues that the "American Way" is incompatible with the US experience of post-World War II capitalism, and that national and individual self-determination are collapsing in the face of profit-seeking social compulsions and the imperatives of global competition. He states that the illusion of free choice and the misguided rhetoric of individualism remain: but they mask new realities of compulsion and collectivism. This cultural contradiction is thoroughly analyzed by Hay from an outside perspective through an investigation of the development of medical liability insurance and its implications for tort law reform and health care provision in the USA. The book seeks to transcend traditional disciplinary boundaries to provide a straightforward account of circumstances giving rise to particular forms of legal, medical and social regulation in the USA through an inquiry into medical malpractice and health care costs in the ever-changing domestic and worldwide arena. It provides a comprehensive association of American medical liability issues, health care spending, and post-war national and international contexts. The book should prove of particular interest to scholars, students and doctors as it provides a framework for understanding legal and medical change associated with medical liability and its insurance.
This book makes a significant contribution to understanding medical malpractice in the United States. It is an exhaustive account of a complex and major social problem, whose value lies in its rich historical detail. Scholars interested in medical insurance and malpractice issues should find this book quite useful.-Contemporary Sociology
"This book makes a significant contribution to understanding medical malpractice in the United States. It is an exhaustive account of a complex and major social problem, whose value lies in its rich historical detail. Scholars interested in medical insurance and malpractice issues should find this book quite useful."-Contemporary Sociology
IAIN HAY is a Professor at Flinders University, South Australia He is the author of The Caring Commodity: The Provision of Health Care in New Zealand (1989).