PMID: 3749972Jan 1, 1986Paper

Community health and reform in Hong Kong

Social Science & Medicine
K McDermott

Abstract

In this paper I argue that the health crisis in the underdeveloped world today is not primarily one of shortages of services, but is a result of lack of power and control over economic, political and social institutions by the majority of the population. Hong Kong is presented as a case study in which a plural medical system is dominated by a political economy that shapes patterns of both sickness and health care. As an advanced capitalist colony, a financial center for the Pacific Basin, and a neutral area for China's foreign negotiations, social policies in Hong Kong aim at promoting business growth, often at the expense of the health of the population. Further, government and voluntary agencies attempts at reforming the health system have done little more than further solidify biomedicine and its social relations. Finally an attempt is made to define potential vehicles for change.

References

Jan 1, 1977·International Journal of Health Services : Planning, Administration, Evaluation·R Crawford
Jan 1, 1975·International Journal of Health Services : Planning, Administration, Evaluation·H S Berliner
Jan 1, 1982·Social Science & Medicine·R P Lee
Nov 1, 1980·Social Science & Medicine. Medical Anthropology·R Frankenberg
Feb 1, 1980·Social Science & Medicine. Medical Anthropology·M T Taussig

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Citations

Jan 1, 1989·Social Science & Medicine·M Singer
Apr 24, 2003·Nursing & Health Sciences·Sophia Siu-chee Chan, Sheila Twinn
Feb 1, 1989·American Journal of Community Psychology·D J Lam, D Y Ho
Jun 7, 2003·Special Care in Dentistry : Official Publication of the American Association of Hospital Dentists, the Academy of Dentistry for the Handicapped, and the American Society for Geriatric Dentistry·David O DonnellYeung Kim Wai
Sep 1, 1990·The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry·C K Wong

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