No Place Like Home No Place Like Home

No Place Like Home

A History of Nursing and Home Care in the United States

    • 26,99 €
    • 26,99 €

Publisher Description

No Place Like Home sets out to determine why home care, despite its potential as a cost-effective alternative to institutional care, remains a marginalized experiment in care giving. Nurse and historian Karen Buhler-Wilkerson traces the history of home care from its nineteenth-century origins in organized visiting nurses' associations, through a time when professional home care nearly disappeared, on to the 1960s, when a new wave of home care gathered force as physicians, hospital managers, and policy makers responded to economic mandates. Buhler-Wilkerson links local ideas about the formation and function of home-based services to national events and health care agendas, and she gives special attention to care of the "dangerous" sick, particularly poor immigrants with infectious diseases, and the "uninteresting" sick—those with chronic illnesses.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2003
30 April
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
312
Pages
PUBLISHER
Johns Hopkins University Press
SIZE
15.7
MB

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