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Indiana
Consortium For Mental Health |
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Abstract Reprint
# 55: The Profession of Medicine and the Public: BERNICE
A. PESCOSOLIDO, Indiana University, Recent
work on the sociology of the professions, in general, and on the
profession of medicine, in particular, target dramatic changes in the
organization of social institutions, "boundary work" among
professionals, and the implications Of both for professional power.
However, public attitudes cited in theories as a critical linchpin of
professional status remain relatively unexplored in the face of these
changes and widespread contentions of public dissatisfaction. Using data
from the 19 76 National Survey of Access to Care (Aday, Andersen, and
Fleming 1980) and the 1998 General Social Survey (Davis, Smith, and
Mardsen 1998), we take advantage of a unique opportunity to compare the
public's attitudes across a 20-year period. We examine individuals'
evaluations of the way physicians do their work and their ability to
confront health problems. Three findings support a complex view of
public sentiments. First, while public confidence in physicians remains
relatively high, we document a crystallization of attitudes reflecting
greater negative and fewer positive sentiments. Second, while neither
the structure of attitudes nor the role of sociodemographic
characteristics in explaining attitudes has significantly shifted over
time, in 1998 health status and insurance status are correlated with
negative attitudes. Third, using General Social Survey time trend data
on the confidence in medicine compared to other professions (science and
education), we find support for a general public response to social
institutions, with confidence in medicine tracking closely with
confidence in science in level, and education in pattern. We end with
four possible explanations of our findings, including and a general
discussion of the role of the public in the professional status of
physicians and its implications for social change in the institution of
medicine.
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