Medicine and Charity Before the Welfare State.

  • Barry, Jonathan
Date:
2002
  • Books
  • Online

About this work

Description

'The book successfully challenges artificial distinctions such as between modern medical treatment and traditional charitable help or private charity and public welfare assistance. It also aruges that charity is never simply a response to obvious social needs. Rather, the growth of charity has had much to do with the self-image and political priorities of donors as with the needs and wants of recipients.'†Contemporary Sociology'This collection is recommended for its conceptual arguments about the integral and continuing role of charity in medicine but also for historical writing which confronts much of orthodox and contemporary interpretation. ... the theoretical arguments are sustained by the case studies used and the text provides stimulus to continue this style of research and writing.'†Social History Society Bulletin'ÂA fascinating examination of a complex and important topic with far-ranging implications for our own understanding of caring and curing today.'†Lancet'This is a mine of information for all those interested in the development of our hospitals and nursing services including domiciliary nursing before the NHS. There are 13 essays in this collection, each written by an eminent historian. The chapters complement each other, being very well researched and fully indexed.'†Nursing Times Publisher abstract

Publication/Creation

Abingdon, Oxon : Taylor & Francis, 2002.

Physical description

1 online resource (272 pages) ; cm.

Type/Technique

Languages

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Identifiers

ISBN

  • 9781134833467