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‘Doctors for Export’: Medical Migration from Ireland c.1860 to 1960: Clio Medica, cartea 99

Autor Greta Jones
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 sep 2021
This is the first full-length study of doctor migration from Ireland covering roughly a century of the export of Irish medical graduates to other parts of the world. From 1860 around forty percent of Ireland’s medical graduates left to pursue careers elsewhere. The book examines the factors which drove emigration, the shifting destinations of the emigrants and the effect of migration both upon them and the Ireland they left behind. This was the migration of a part of the Irish middle class, small in terms of Irish emigration as a whole, but important in the global history of medical migration. At the end of the twentieth century doctor migration as a whole has increased and become a significant part of the medical experience. The book is a contribution to the growing literature on the global history of doctor movements across the world.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004324459
ISBN-10: 9004324453
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Clio Medica


Notă biografică

Greta Jones is emeritus professor of history at Ulster University and the author of several books on Darwinism, eugenics and the history of tuberculosis. With help from the Wellcome Trust, she set up the Centre for the History of Medicine in Ireland at Ulster University. In 2019 she was elected an honorary fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland.

Cuprins

Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
Abbreviations

Introduction
1 Irish Emigration
2Doctor Migration
3The Internationalisation of Medicine
4The Structure of the Book

1 The Medical Institutions of Ireland
1The Medical Registration Act 1858
2The Evolution of Irish Medical Education
3The Hospitals
4The Poor Law
5Professional Organisations in Ireland and Britain
6The Number of Doctors in Ireland
7The Over-Production of Doctors in Ireland
8Conclusion

2 Making a Medical Living
1General Practice in Ireland and England
2General Practice in Ireland
3Private Practice
4The Doctors’ Boycott
5Conclusion

3 The British Empire
1The Indian Medical Service
2Far-Flung Shores
3Those Who Returned
4The IMS and the Scientific Mind
5The Decline of the Colonial Medical Services
6Conclusion

4 Medicine, Migration and the Making of the Irish Middle Class
1The Costs of Medical Education in Ireland
2Catholics, Medicine and Social Mobility
3The Catholic Middle Classes and Medicine
4Income, Class and Migration
5Migration, Money and the Middle-Class Family
6Migration and a Medical Dynasty
7Migration and Poverty
8Ireland’s Intellectual Resources
9Conclusion

5 Partition
1The Settlement in Health
2The Registration Crisis
3Connections Maintained
4The Border with Ireland
5The Future of Medicine in Ireland
6The Notion of Being Irish and Emigration
7Conclusion

6 The Irish Doctor in Interwar Britain
1The Insurance Act and Migration
2The Distribution of Graduates from Irish Medical Schools
3Friendship and Collegiality
4The “Powerful Army” of Catholic Doctors and Practice in Britain
5The Guild of SS Luke, Cosmos and Damian
6Professional Integration
7The Role of the State in Health Care
8The National Health Service and the Irish Migrant Doctor
9Conclusion

7 The Lure of America
1The Rockefeller Visit to Ireland
2Medical Immigration to the United States
3The AMA, Doctor Immigration and the Approved List
4The Irish Medical Emigrant and the USA
5The Approved List and the Foreign Medical Schools
6Ireland and the Approved List
7The Irish Medical Schools and the Irish Doctor
8The End of the Approved List
9Conclusion

8 Inward Migration
1The State and Medical Education
2Medical Education in the New Era
3Foreign Students
4A Private Medical School in the Age of Globalisation
5The Future of Irish Medical Emigration
6Conclusion

Epilogue
Appendix
Bibliography
Index