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Covenant, Compassion and Marketisation in Healthcare: the mastery of Mammon and the service of grace

Abstract:
This chapter argues that covenantal thought and practice has the capacity to discipline marketisation processes in service of an ethos of gracious compassion in healthcare. It engages critically with the analyses of Diagnosis Related Groups, Personal Budgets and Defensive Medicine offered by Feiler, Herring, Papanikitas and Jani in the preceding three chapters, showing that the key themes of ‘care’ and ‘work’ can be illumined by a covenantal approach which works judiciously with healthcare marketisation. Constructively, it draws on parallels in the Armed Services to argue for five required characteristics of a written and institutionalised Healthcare Covenant between health and care workers and the public. Drawing on traditions of pastoral and political theology to explore the psychological and social influences of marketisation, this chapter provides the bridge between the systemic issues of Part I, the policy concerns of Part II and the questions of professional ethics considered in Part III.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Oxford college:
Harris Manchester College
Role:
Author, Editor

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Role:
Editor
Role:
Editor


Publisher:
Routledge
Host title:
Marketisation, Ethics and Healthcare: Policy, Practice and Moral Formation
Place of publication:
Abingdon
Publication date:
2018-02-02


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:709738
UUID:
uuid:c7f56c8a-f1b7-41be-a6ab-4d9b572f2e13
Local pid:
pubs:709738
Source identifiers:
709738
Deposit date:
2017-08-17

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