Description: Making a Medical Market begins with the first voluntary hospital in 1720 and ends in 1911 with national health insurance. It looks at different forms of practice--public appointments in hospitals, office under state welfare systems, and private practice. From the 1750s medicine became more commercialized. Doctors were successful in raising demand for their own services but were unsuccessful in restricting competition. Many medical practitioners struggled to make a living by seeing many patients at low fees, so that "five minutes for the patient" is not a new feature of health care.
Review Quotes: "...Anne Digby brings an impressive grasp of the literature of medical history and the social history of medicine and an imaginative search for fresh sources. ...this is a delightfully written and appealing example of modern scholarly work." Journal of Economic History