The New England Journal of Medicine
e-mail icon  FREE NEJM E-TOC    HOME   |   SUBSCRIBE   |   CURRENT ISSUE   |   PAST ISSUES   |   COLLECTIONS   |    Advanced Search
Sign in | Get NEJM's E-Mail Table of Contents — Free | Subscribe
 
Book Review
PreviousPrevious
Volume 338:845 March 19, 1998 Number 12
NextNext

Demanding Medical Excellence: Doctors and accountability in the information age

Since this article has no abstract, we have provided an extract of the first 100 words of the full text and any section headings.

 Sign up for free e-toc
 

This Article
-Full Text
-Purchase this article

Tools and Services
-Add to Personal Archive
-Add to Citation Manager
-Notify a Friend
-E-mail When Cited

More Information
By Michael L. Millenson. 433 pp. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1997. $24.95. ISBN 0-226-52587-2.

Information is power, and perhaps a seed of corruption. In Michael Millenson's paean to medicine in the information age, once corporations have confiscated power from clinicians it absolutely does not corrupt.

Millenson, a Chicago-based health reporter turned consultant, is a true believer in the virtue of the information revolution. His engaging account of the development of information science and quality assurance in medicine is enlivened by clinical vignettes and brief biographies of key actors. The first of his principal theses — that doctors, unsupervised and unaccountable throughout most of this century, committed a myriad of sins — is surely correct. . . . [Full Text of this Article]




HOME  |  SUBSCRIBE  |  SEARCH  |  CURRENT ISSUE  |  PAST ISSUES  |  COLLECTIONS  |  PRIVACY  |  HELP  |  beta.nejm.org

Comments and questions? Please contact us.

The New England Journal of Medicine is owned, published, and copyrighted © 2008 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.