Literature DB >> 10351258

Kindly technicians: hospital administrators immediately before the NHS.

M Learmonth1.   

Abstract

Presents the results of a qualitative analysis of copies of The Hospital, a journal for UK hospital administrators, from 1946-1948: immediately prior to the establishment of the NHS. Characterises administrators in that period as kindly technicians. Analyses administrators' ways of thinking; spheres of influence and level of education. Also notes their concern for the running of support services; their implicit and unexamined deference to medical staff and an explicit belief in the need to carry out their role with kindliness. Concludes by highlighting the changes in managerial thinking between the 1940s and today and speculates that these changes may be best understood, following Foucault, as phenomena of rupture and discontinuity rather than as linear progression.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 10351258     DOI: 10.1108/02689239810234562

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Manag Med        ISSN: 0268-9235


  2 in total

1.  Care of the self and patient participation in genetic discourse: a Foucauldian reading of the surgeon general's "my family health portrait" program.

Authors:  Benjamin R Bates
Journal:  J Genet Couns       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 2.537

2.  'The type of person needed is one possessing a wide humanity': the development of the NHS national administrative training scheme.

Authors:  Philip Begley
Journal:  Contemp Br Hist       Date:  2019-11-18
  2 in total

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