Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Editors’ overview
- one Introduction: professional health regulation in the public interest
- two Health care governance, user involvement and medical regulation in Europe
- three The informalisation of professional–patient interactions and the consequences for regulation in the United Kingdom
- four The regulation of health care in Scandinavia: professionals, the public interest and trust
- five Medical regulation for the public interest in the United Kingdom
- six Regulating the regulators: the rise of the United Kingdom Professional Standards Authority
- seven Regulation and Russian medicine: whither medical professionalisation?
- eight Patterns of medical oversight and regulation in Canada
- nine Let the consumer beware: maintenance of licensure and certification in the United States
- ten Governing complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in Brazil and Portugal: implications for CAM professionals and the public
- eleven Birth of the hydra-headed monster: a unique antipodean model of health workforce governance
- twelve Health complaints entities in Australia and New Zealand: serving the public interest?
- thirteen Trust and the regulation of health systems: insights from India
- Index
Editors’ overview
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 April 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Editors’ overview
- one Introduction: professional health regulation in the public interest
- two Health care governance, user involvement and medical regulation in Europe
- three The informalisation of professional–patient interactions and the consequences for regulation in the United Kingdom
- four The regulation of health care in Scandinavia: professionals, the public interest and trust
- five Medical regulation for the public interest in the United Kingdom
- six Regulating the regulators: the rise of the United Kingdom Professional Standards Authority
- seven Regulation and Russian medicine: whither medical professionalisation?
- eight Patterns of medical oversight and regulation in Canada
- nine Let the consumer beware: maintenance of licensure and certification in the United States
- ten Governing complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in Brazil and Portugal: implications for CAM professionals and the public
- eleven Birth of the hydra-headed monster: a unique antipodean model of health workforce governance
- twelve Health complaints entities in Australia and New Zealand: serving the public interest?
- thirteen Trust and the regulation of health systems: insights from India
- Index
Summary
This volume is the first in a series entitled the Sociology of Health Professions: Future International Directions, published by Policy Press and edited by Mike Saks and Mike Dent, supported by a high-profile international advisory board. The research-based series is focused on giving innovatory sociological insights into the past, present and future development of the health professions. It is primarily oriented towards final-year and postgraduate students, academic lecturers/researchers, practitioners and policy makers. Its general aims are:
• to inform and stimulate debate about issues in the sociology of health professions;
• to influence policy development and practice in the fields concerned;
• to make a significant contribution to academic thinking in the sociology of health; and
• to produce original national/international work of recognised high quality.
This present volume on Professional Health Regulation in the Public Interest: International Perspectives is the first to be published under the series banner. Its significance in terms of the series is underlined by the positive contextual words in the Foreword by a world-renowned academic leader in the field of comparative health policy, Richard B. Saltman. It is co-edited by John Martyn Chamberlain, Mike Dent and Mike Saks – the first of whom introduces the volume and its various contributions in the initial chapter of this flagship book. It is anticipated that the book will fill an important gap in the literature, drawing on the strongest work internationally on the regulation of health professions. This edited collection is also characterised by its breadth of coverage of health professional groups and the depth of knowledge and experience of its contributors in combining academically rigorous analysis with a policy thrust. As such, it should appeal not only to academics and practitioners, but also to regulators – including government policy makers and professional bodies themselves. This policy orientation and a focus on positive socio-political impact will continue to be the kitemark of other books in the series as it moves forward over the coming years, with the backing of Policy Press.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Professional Health Regulation in the Public InterestInternational Perspectives, pp. xivPublisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2018