1993
DOI: 10.1177/053901893032002002
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Comparing national patterns of medical specialization: a contribution to the theory of professions

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Cited by 18 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…First, joining a team means better collaboration among physicians, which is important for modern medicine. Healthcare is now a team effort because modern medicine is becoming more and more complicated [24]. A single physician cannot solve all problems, especially complex problems.…”
Section: The Research Model and Hypothesis Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, joining a team means better collaboration among physicians, which is important for modern medicine. Healthcare is now a team effort because modern medicine is becoming more and more complicated [24]. A single physician cannot solve all problems, especially complex problems.…”
Section: The Research Model and Hypothesis Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, occupational specialization proceeds from intraprofessional boundary settlements concerning jurisdiction of service and the organization of working environments in limited (i.e., local) settings (Strauss et al, 1963;Bucher and Stelling, 1969;Abbott, 1988: 81, 106;Halpern, 1988Halpern, , 1992Döhler, 1993). Thus, it is of sociological interest to uncover material factors which shape individual and organizational interests in relation to, on the one hand, specialization of tasks, personnel, and roles, and, on the other, coordination of differentiated structures and functions.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A somewhat greater degree of standardization is reached in the field of professionally oriented studies through the accreditation of medical and law school programmes by the major professional associations (the American Bar Association, the American Medical Association). Moreover, at least in medical training, this is also a precondition for admission to the nationally administered certification examination (Dohler 1993a;. For law students, on the other hand, admission to the legal profession continues to depend on bar exams administered by the bar associations of individual states.…”
Section: Max-planck-institut Für Gesellschaftsforschung Cologne Germanymentioning
confidence: 99%