There has been a lacuna in previous studies of medicine and health care of concepts or structures relating changes in health care with their contextualizing social structures. That is, there is a need to more adequately account for health care and social structure in terms of dynamic rather than static concepts. This article reports the application of a general schema outlining the transformation of capitalism through the phases of entrepreneurial, monopoly, and global capitalism, first presented by Ross and Trachte, to help understand both the changing role of medicine in Canada and the historical trajectory of the development of health insurance. These related events are shown to be partly reflective of the transformed class dynamics involved in a changing capitalist mode of production. The recent history of challenges to medicare in Canada as well as evidence of the declining power of medicine are both related directly and indirectly to the increased power of business and the decline in the relative autonomy of the state accompanying globalization. The application of the phases of capitalism sequence does roughly fit the Canadian instance although some modifications will be required to account for the specifics of the Canadian case. The schema also helps resolve two previously competing class arguments about the rise of health insurance in Canada.
Phases of Capitalism, Welfare States, Medical Dominance, and Health Care in Ontario
Published 1999 in International Journal of Health Services
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
1999
- Venue
International Journal of Health Services
- Publication date
1999-10-01
- Fields of study
Sociology, Medicine, Political Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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