When the CBC organized a national contest to identify the greatest
Canadian of all time, few were surprised when the father of Medicare,
Tommy Douglas, won by a large margin: Medicare is central to Canadian
identity. Yet focusing on Douglas and his fight for social justice
obscures other important aspects of the construction of Canada's
national health insurance - especially its longstanding dependence on
immigrant doctors. Foreign Practices reconsiders the early history of
Medicare through the stories of foreign-trained doctors who entered
the country in the three decades after the Second World War. By making
strategic use of oral history, analyzing contemporary medical debates,
and reconstructing doctors' life histories, Sasha Mullally and David
Wright demonstrate that foreign doctors arrived by the hundreds at a
pivotal moment for health care services. Just as Medicare was
launched, Canada began to prioritize "highly skilled manpower" when
admitting newcomers, a novel policy that drew thousands of
professionals from around the world. Doctors from India and Iran,
Haiti and Hong Kong, and Romania and the Republic of South Africa
would fundamentally transform the medical landscape of the country.
Charting the fascinating history of physician immigration to Canada,
and the ethical debates it provoked, Foreign Practices places the
Canadian experience within a wider context of global migration after
the Second World War.
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Immigrant Doctors and the History of Canadian Medicare
Product details
ISBN
9780228004929
Published
2021
Publisher
ACP - McGill Queen's University Press
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok