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  • Bedside Manner

Bedside Manner

Hospital and Health Care in Hong Kong

Robin Hutcheon


English , 1999/06 The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press

Tags: Medical Science & Health Care

229 x 152 mm , 292pp ISBN / ISSN : 9789622017986

  • US$28.00


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In Hong Kong the responsibility for building and operating hospitals was used to be shared between the Government of Hong Kong and a number of charities, including religious orders, some with traditions dating back to the earliest times. Unfortunately this dual system of government and subvented hospitals was not integrated, leading to problems of coordination and management and resulting in gaps and duplication in services, inefficient and ineffective use of resources as well as low staff morale. The problems had persisted against a background of significant population growth, rising community expectations and technological advancement. Fundamental and radical solutions were needed.

Overseas experts were invited by the Hong Kong Government to study the situation in the mid-1980s. Finally the Government adopted their proposal and set up an autonomous body, the Hospital Authority, to tackle this crucial problem. The development of this local health care system since the 1980s, the setting up of the Hospital Authority and its work in the past few years form the subject of this book.

The author, Robin Hutcheon, is a journalist and writer, with long experience in Hong Kong. He came to Hong Kong in 1953 and was the Editor of the largest English newspaper, South China Morning Post, in 1967-1986. He retired to Australia in 1987 and has since written a number of monographs on Hong Kong companies and personalities closely linked with Hong Kong or southern China, including company histories of the Hong Kong and China Gas Co. Ltd., Wharf (Holdings) Ltd., South China Morning Post and so forth.

To write this book, the author spent two years interviewing people at different levels, visiting hospitals and talking to patients and staff, the investigations of which have provided for the basis of Bedside Manner.

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