Health care in crisis : hospitals, nurses, and the consequences of policy change / Theresa Morris.
Publisher: New York : New York University Press, [2018]Description: vii, 241 pages ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781479827695
- 147982769X
- 9781479813520
- 1479813524
- RA410.53 .M664 2018
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | RA410.53 .M664 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001483881 |
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RA410.53 .G68 2009 Too much medicine : a doctor's prescription for better and more affordable health care / | RA410.53 .H33 2013 The citizen patient : reforming health care for the sake of the patient, not the system / | RA410.53 .M336 2021 The price we pay : what broke American health care--and how to fix it / | RA410.53 .M664 2018 Health care in crisis : hospitals, nurses, and the consequences of policy change / | RA410.53 .R45 2019 Priced out : the economic and ethical costs of American health care / | RA410.54 .U6 W56 2021 The next shift : the fall of industry and the rise of health care in Rust Belt America / | RA410.9 .C2 A76 2008 Critical to care : the invisible women in health services / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 223-233) and index.
Part I. Fuller hospital; 1. Welcome to the obstetric unit -- 2. A day in the life of an obstetrical nurse -- Part II. Nursing and organizational change; 3. Patient-oriented nurses -- 4. Process-oriented nurses -- Part III. The root of the problem; 5. Health care policy changes and organizational crises -- Conclusion.
More and more not-for-profit hospitals are becoming financially unstable and being acquired by large hospital systems. The effects range from not having necessary life-saving equipment to losing the most experienced nurses to better jobs at other hospitals. In Health Care in Crisis, Theresa Morris takes an in-depth look at how this unintended consequence of the Affordable Care Act plays out in a non-profit hospital's obstetrical ward. Based on ethnographic observations of and in-depth interviews with obstetrical nurses and hospital administrators at a community, not-for-profit hospital in New England, Health Care in Crisis examines how nurses' care of patients changed over the three-year period in which the Affordable Care Act was implemented, state Medicaid funds to hospitals were slashed, and hospitals were being acquired by a for-profit hospital system. Morris explains how the tumultuous political-economic changes have challenged obstetrical nurses, who are at the front lines of providing care for women during labor and birth. -- Provided by publisher.
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