ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1984, this book attempted to fill a gap by providing a broad-ranging structural analysis of the health care sector and the political and economic forces which influence its shape and contents, both in the western world and developing countries. The contributors examine the relationships of capitalism to health care, in terms of its influence on the physical environment, the incidence of social diseases and the prevailing (20th Century) view of what constitutes health itself; and in terms of the consequences of the new medical industrial complex it has created, such as the declining provision of health care for the poor and disadvantaged and the growing power of the pharmaceutical industry.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part One|84 pages

The social production of health and illness

chapter One|37 pages

Capitalism, health, and illness

chapter Two|45 pages

A cultural account of “health”

Control, release, and the social body

part Two|36 pages

Capital interests and the role of the state

part Three|114 pages

Selected issues

chapter Four|44 pages

Organizing medical care for profit

chapter Six|38 pages

Physicians and their sponsors

The new medical relations of production

part Four|28 pages

The penetration of the developing world by the transnational medical industrial complex