Description |
1 online resource (vi, 246 pages) |
Series |
Rochester Studies in Medical History |
|
Rochester studies in medical history
|
Contents |
Introduction -- Part 1. Inventing British medicine -- 1. Mediating Nation and Empire in the Political Landscape of British Medicine in the World, 1858-86 -- 2. Expanding the Boundaries of British Medicine to Foreign and Colonial Doctors, 1886-1919 -- 3. Autonomy and Control: Managing British Medicine in the Age of Decolonization, 1919-30 -- 4. The International Crisis of World War II and the Differential Treatment of Overseas-Trained Doctors, 1933-48 -- Part 2. Remaking British medicine -- 5. From Asset to Liability: Overseas Doctors of Color in the United Kingdom, 1955-70 -- 6. Managing the Political Problem of the Registration of Overseas Doctors, 1971-73 -- 7. Redefining Access to the Medical Register for Overseas Medical Graduates, 1972-75 -- 8. Managing a Globalized Workforce within the National Boundaries of British Medicine, 1975 -- Conclusion: Overseas Doctors Needed, but Not Wanted |
Summary |
Fit to Practice proposes a new narrative of the making of the modern British medical profession, situating it in relation to the imperatives and tensions of national and imperial interests. The narrative is interwoven with the institutional history of the General Medical Council (GMC), the main regulatory body of the medical profession. The GMC's management of the medical register from 1858 to 1980 offers important insight into the political underpinning of the profession, particularly when it came to regulating who was fit to practice medicine, under what conditions, and where. Technically, admission to the British medical register endowed all doctors with common rights and privileges. Yet the differential treatment of women in the nineteenth century, Jewish medical refugees during World War II, and Indian doctors both before and after decolonization reveals the persistence of hierarchies of gender, national identity, and race in determining who was fit to practice British medicine. Part 1 of the book, which spans from 1858 to 1948, focuses on the transformation of the British Empire from a destination for the surplus production of domestic medical graduates to a critical source of medical labor for Britain during wartime. Part 2 examines the postwar causes and consequences of the unprecedented globalization of the domestic profession |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Arzt. |
|
Medicine -- Great Britain -- History -- 19th century
|
|
Medicine -- Great Britain -- History -- 20th century
|
|
Discrimination in medical care -- Great Britain
|
|
Medical policy -- Social aspects -- Great Britain
|
|
Clinical competence.
|
|
Foreign Medical Graduates -- history
|
|
Education, Medical -- history
|
|
Clinical Competence
|
|
Colonialism -- history
|
|
Social Discrimination -- history
|
|
History, 19th Century
|
|
History, 20th Century
|
|
HEALTH & FITNESS -- Holism.
|
|
HEALTH & FITNESS -- Reference.
|
|
MEDICAL -- Alternative Medicine.
|
|
MEDICAL -- Atlases.
|
|
MEDICAL -- Essays.
|
|
MEDICAL -- Family & General Practice.
|
|
MEDICAL -- Holistic Medicine.
|
|
MEDICAL -- Osteopathy.
|
|
MEDICAL / History
|
|
Clinical competence
|
|
Discrimination in medical care
|
|
Medical policy -- Social aspects
|
|
Medicine
|
|
Medizin
|
|
Heilberuf
|
|
Diskriminierung
|
|
United Kingdom |
|
Great Britain
|
|
Großbritannien
|
Genre/Form |
Electronic books
|
|
History
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
ISBN |
9781787441385 |
|
1787441385 |
|