Critical To Care: The Invisible Women in Health Services

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University of Toronto Press, Jun 14, 2008 - Medical - 176 pages

Who counts as a health care worker? The question of where we draw the line between health care workers and non-health care workers is not merely a matter of academic nicety or a debate without consequences for care. It is a central issue for policy development because the definition often results in a division among workers in ways that undermine care.

Critical to Care uses a wide range of evidence to reveal the contributions that those who provide personal care, who cook, clean, keep records, and do laundry make to health services. As a result of current reforms, these workers are increasingly treated as peripheral even though the research on what determines health demonstrates that their work is essential. The authors stress the invisibility and undervaluing of 'women's work' as well as the importance of context in understanding how this work is defined and treated.

Through a gendered analysis, Critical to Care establishes a basis for discussing research, policy, and other actions in relation to the work of thousands of marginalized women and men every day.

 

Contents

List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
2 Counting the Work and the Workers
3 Determining Who Counts
4 Identifying Contributions to Care
5 Making Gender Matters Visible
6 Exposing Health Hazards at Work
7 Challenging the Construction of Ancillary Work
8 Developing Options
A Guide to Canadian Data on Ancillary Workers in the Health Care Sector
References
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Pat Armstrong is a Distinguished Research Professor of Sociology, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and a professor in the Department of Sociology at York University.

Hugh Armstrong is a Distinguished Research Professor and professor emeritus of Social Work, Political Economy, and Sociology at Carleton University.

Krista Scott-Dixon is a research associate at the Institute for Work and Health in Toronto.

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