Bedside Manner : Hospital and Health Care in Hong Kong
Overview
In countries all over the world today there is a rising concern over the escalating costs of health care and the inability of governments and individuals to affordably pay. This concern has led to a quest for innovative ways to reform and reorder health care systems without sacrificing quality or essential care. In Hong Kong in past years, the responsibility for building and operating hospitals was shared between the government and a number of charities. But while the buildings served their purpose and their staffs were highly trained, health care in general fell short of expectations. The gap between treatment of the affluent in private hospitals and the poor in public or charitable institutions, struggling with large numbers and limited resources, seemed unbridgeable. By way of radical solutions, the Hong Kong government finally set up the Hospital Authority to tackle this crucial issue. This book gives a description and analysis of the development of the Hospital Authority, its response to the expectations of the general public, and its achievements. Robin Hutcheon--writer, journalist, editor--is a long-time resident of China and Hong Kong. Distributed by the University of Michigan Press in Canada and the United States and its dependencies.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9789622017986
- ISBN-10: 9622017983
- Publisher: Chinese University of Hong Kong Press
- Publish Date: July 1999
- Dimensions: 8.99 x 5.92 x 0.64 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.9 pounds
- Page Count: 292
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