信仰的丧失:美国医学界政治合法性降低的根源。

M. Schlesinger
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引用次数: 168

摘要

在过去的30年里,医学界的政治合法性和决策影响力在美国社会大大下降。尽管对原因进行了猜测,但很少有实证研究评估不同的解释。为了解决这一差距,1995年收集的数据被用来比较美国公众和政策精英对医疗权威的态度。统计分析显示:(1)精英阶层对专业权威的敌意大于公众;(2)公众与政策精英的合法性下降来源不同;(3)对医疗行业合法性威胁最大的认知是对专业能力的怀疑、医生被认为缺乏利他主义以及对医疗行业政治影响力的有限信心。本文最后对美国医学专业权威的未来进行了一些推测。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A loss of faith: the sources of reduced political legitimacy for the American medical profession.
The political legitimacy and policymaking influence of the medical profession have greatly declined in American society over the past 30 years. Despite speculation about the causes, there has been little empirical research assessing the different explanations. To address this gap, data collected in 1995 are used to compare attitudes of the American public and policy elites toward medical authority. Statistical analyses reveal that (1) elites are more hostile to professional authority than is the public; (2) the sources of declining legitimacy are different for the public than they are for policy elites; and (3) the perceptions that most threaten the legitimacy of the medical profession pertain to doubts about professional competence, physicians' perceived lack of altruism, and limited confidence in the profession's political influence. This article concludes with some speculations about the future of professional authority in American medicine.
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