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E-raamat: Medicalization of Birth and Death

(Rochester Institute of Technology)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Dec-2019
  • Kirjastus: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421433349
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Dec-2019
  • Kirjastus: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421433349

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Improving how individuals give birth and die in the United States requires reforming the regulatory, reimbursement, and legal structures that centralize care in hospitals and prevent the growth of community-based alternatives.

In 1900, most Americans gave birth and died at home, with minimal medical intervention. By contrast, most Americans today begin and end their lives in hospitals. The medicalization we now see is due in large part to federal and state policies that draw patients away from community-based providers, such as birth centers and hospice care, and toward the most intensive and costliest kinds of care. But the evidence suggests that birthing and dying people receive too mucheven harmfulmedical intervention.

In The Medicalization of Birth and Death, political scientist Lauren K. Hall describes how and why birth and death became medicalized events. While hospitalization provides certain benefits, she acknowledges, it also creates harms, limiting patient autonomy, driving up costs, and causing a cascade of interventions, many with serious side effects. Tracing the regulatory, legal, and financial policies that centralize care during birth and death, Hall argues that medicalization reduces competition, stifles innovation, and prevents individuals from accessing the most appropriate care during their most vulnerable moments. She also examines the profound implications of policy-enforced medicalization on informed consent and shows how medicalization challenges the healthcare community's most foundational ethical commitments.

Drawing on interviews with medical and nonmedical healthcare providers, as well as surveys of patients and their families, Hall provides a broad overview of the costs, benefits, and origins of medicalized birth and death. The Medicalization of Birth and Death is required reading for academics, patients, providers, policymakers, and anyone else interested in how policy shapes healthcare options and limits patients and providers during life's most profound moments.

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Improving how individuals give birth and die in the United States requires reforming the regulatory, reimbursement, and legal structures that centralize care in hospitals and prevent the growth of community-based alternatives.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. The Watershed of Healthcare Decision Making 1(20)
1 Medicalized Birth and the Current of Centralized Care
21(30)
2 Medicalized Death and the Current of Centralized Care
51(29)
3 Safe Harbors for Demedicalized Birth and Death
80(24)
4 Navigating the Regulation Tributary
104(34)
5 Swept Away on the Reimbursement Headwater
138(28)
6 Caught in the Riptide of Risk
166(30)
7 Black Birth and Death in the Medicalized Rapids
196(30)
Conclusion. Reshaping the Watershed 226(23)
Appendix. Interview Information 249(2)
Glossary 251(12)
Notes 263(60)
Index 323
Lauren K. Hall is an associate professor of political science at the Rochester Institute of Technology. She is the author of Family and the Politics of Moderation: Private Life, Public Goods, and the Rebirth of Social Individualism.