Bargaining for Health

Bargaining for Health

Author: Raymond Munts

Publisher:

Published: 1967

Total Pages: 330

ISBN-13:

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Study of collective bargaining in respect of health insurance in the USA - covers historical developments and trade union relations in the matter with employers, insurance business circles, hospitals, physicians and health service centres. Notes and bibliography pp. 247 to 310.


When Doctors Join Unions

When Doctors Join Unions

Author: Grace Budrys

Publisher: Cornell University Press

Published: 2018-10-18

Total Pages: 196

ISBN-13: 1501722395

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Current and anticipated changes in this country's health care system are likely to add momentum to the physicians' union movement, according to Grace Budrys. She documents the emergence and development of the Union of American Physicians and Dentists (UAPD), founded in the San Francisco Bay area in 1972, and suggests it may be a harbinger of renewed organizing efforts throughout the country.Representing both salaried and private practice doctors, the UAPD gained strength in the early 1980s during the crisis in malpractice suits, and surged again in recent years in response to steadily increasing medical corporatization. Budrys argues that the approach to modernization now favored across the country resembles that of the industrialization era. As health organizations become larger, more centralized, and more hierarchical, decisions are made further from the work site and some traditional responsibilities are delegated to lower-paid, less-trained workers.Nevertheless, the image of blue-collar industrial workers organizing into unions is not easily reconciled with our society's image of physicians as highly trained and highly skilled members of a profession long considered the bastion of individualists. Budrys suggests that doctors' unions in general and the UAPD in particular may provide a model for other nontraditional groups and occupations seeking solutions to contemporary problems in the workplace. After discussing the laws governing workers' organizing rights and their interpretation by the courts, she concludes with commentary on the organizing activity taking place among highly paid and highly educated workers.


Collective Bargaining by Physicians

Collective Bargaining by Physicians

Author: Sujit Choudhry

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Collective bargaining has caught the imagination of physicians across the United States. Although physicians' unions have existed since the 1970s, union members have always constituted an extremely small percentage of practicing physicians. However, physicians are turning to unions to increase their bargaining power with managed-care organizations. They are also viewing unions as a way to help reclaim their clinical autonomy and to preserve and enhance the quality of care. Struggles over reimbursement and physicians' clinical prerogatives are likely to increase during the next decade as health care costs rise. In this article, we examine the relations and tensions between federal labor law and antitrust law in the context of collective bargaining between physicians and managed-care organizations.


Organization of Health Workers and Labor Conflict

Organization of Health Workers and Labor Conflict

Author: Samuel Wolfe

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-04-16

Total Pages: 284

ISBN-13: 1351842439

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Offers insights into such contemporary issues as health workers' unions, labor conflicts in health care facilities, and underlying class and class related sex and ethnic conflicts that beset the health sector.