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Unionization by Salaried Physicians and the Managerial-Employee Exclusion: The Need for a Modified Approach by the National Labor Relations Board

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2021

Extract

The increased concern with cost-containment and the cost-efficient delivery of medical services has led to fundamental changes in the management of health care institutions over the past few decades. Health care is becoming concentrated in large facilities, since they are perceived to have the resources to plan cost-efficient allocation and utilization of medical services. In the past, physicians provided most of the executive and administrative leadership in American health care facilities and used them primarily for the private practice of medicine. Today, professional administrators and bureaucrats run these institutions as large corporate entities. Moreover, more and more physicians are taking salaried positions, due in large part to the oversupply of doctors that developed during the 1970s and 1980s. In fact, some observers believe that in the near future, the majority of physicians will be “employees” of some kind.

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Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1987

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References

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