توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Professional Health Regulation in the Public Interest: International Perspectives
نام کتاب : Professional Health Regulation in the Public Interest: International Perspectives
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : مقررات بهداشت حرفه ای در منافع عمومی: دیدگاه های بین المللی
سری :
نویسندگان : John Martyn Chamberlain (editor), Mike Dent (editor), Mike Saks (editor)
ناشر : Policy Press
سال نشر : 2018
تعداد صفحات : 289
ISBN (شابک) : 9781447332275
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 1 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
PROFESSIONAL HEALTH REGULATION IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST\nContents\nList of tables\nNotes on contributors\nForeword\nEditors’ overview\n1. Introduction: professional health regulation in the public interest\n Health care regulation: some global trends\n The sociology of the professions: a cautionary tale\n Tribunal reform, ‘the economics of punishment’ and the public interest\n Chapter overview\n Conclusion\n2. Health care governance, user involvement and medical regulation in Europe\n Introduction\n Medical regulation and governance\n User involvement in Europe\n User involvement, governance and medical regulation\n Conclusion\n3. The informalisation of professional–patient interactions and the consequences for regulation in the United Kingdom\n Introduction\n Informalisation and functional democratisation\n The implications of shifting dynamics for regulatory and policy understandings of good clinical practice\n The implications of shifting dynamics for the regulation of good clinical practice\n Clinical governance: measuring the intangibles?\n From profession-based trust towards a more critical, interaction-won trust\n Conclusion\n4. The regulation of health care in Scandinavia: professionals, the public interest and trust\n Introduction\n The institutional structure of Scandinavian health care systems\n Governance and formal responsibility for the provision of health services\n Financing and payment schemes\n The regulation of professionals\n Patient involvement in the regulation of health organisations and professionals\n Does regulation promote the public interest in Scandinavia?\n Does the system provide a high level of trust between patients and health professionals?\n Conclusion\n5. Medical regulation for the public interest in the United Kingdom\n Introduction\n History\n Key recent events and issues\n Conclusion\n6. Regulating the regulators: the rise of the United Kingdom Professional Standards Authority\n Introduction\n Why regulatory reform?\n What is regulation and how has it changed?\n Reforming professional regulation: an evolutionary process\n The professional councils: activity, diversity and barriers to change\n Regular checks on competence – revalidation and continuing professional development\n Dealing with complaints\n Continuing diversity and the case for reform\n Conclusion\n7. Regulation and Russian medicine: whither medical professionalisation?\n Introduction\n Medical regulation in early modern times\n The deprofessionalisation of medicine following the 1917 Russian Revolution\n Medical regulation in the subsequent years of the Soviet Union\n The reprofessionalisation of medicine in Russia in the post-Soviet era\n Conclusion\n8. Patterns of medical oversight and regulation in Canada\n Introduction\n The methodology employed in the study\n The results of the study\n Patient-centred commitments\n Physician-centred commitments\n Conclusion\n9. Let the consumer beware: maintenance of licensure and certification in the United States\n Introduction\n Licensing in the United States\n Specialty certification\n New issues: maintenance of licensure and certification\n Legislature pushback\n Local and national medical organisations push back against change\n Where is the public?\n The judiciary raises new issues\n Results of pushback: the Interstate Compact as a substitute\n Federal government’s efforts at education and demonstrating competency: opioids and the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act 2015\n Conclusion: regulating care in a market-based democracy\n10. Governing complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in Brazil and Portugal: implications for CAM professionals and the public\n Introduction\n Governing complementary and alternative medicine: a complex phenomenon\n CAM governance in Brazil\n CAM governance in Portugal\n Conclusion\n11. Birth of the hydra-headed monster: a unique antipodean model of health workforce governance\n Introduction\n A national challenge\n Professions, governments and managerialism\n A national solution\n Birth of the hydra-headed monster\n A hydra-headed monster\n Governance and accountability arrangements – accountability in the public interest\n Conclusion\n12. Health complaints entities in Australia and New Zealand: serving the public interest?\n Introduction\n Establishment of health complaints entities\n Scope, powers, aims and functions\n Processes for health complaints\n The interface with the public interest\n Challenges and opportunities\n Conclusion\n13. Trust and the regulation of health systems: insights from India\n Introduction\n Rationales for regulation\n Regulation of the health sector in India\n Regulatory failures\n Regulatory failures in the Indian health system: some examples\n The case of failures in implementing and enforcing existing regulations\n Remedying regulatory failures: the need to rebuild trust?\n Cultures of trust and the link with modes of governance\n The trust/control duality\n Approaches to addressing regulatory failures: repairing trust in organisations and institutions\n Conclusion: a need for research evidence\nIndex