Brown J V
Int J Health Serv. 1987;17(1):65-76. doi: 10.2190/25FU-RCVN-JP4M-EH64.
Traditional explanations for the relatively low status of the Soviet medical profession credit the Bolshevik government in the 1920s with deprofessionalizing or "leveling" a once autonomous and powerful occupational group. This article presents new data which challenge that interpretation. The Russian medical profession was never autonomous and powerful. Many physicians cooperated with the Bolsheviks because of shared beliefs regarding the organization of medical care. By the late imperial period, many physicians advocated the inclusion of all medical workers in policy-making administrative organs. Focusing upon Russian psychiatrists, the author analyzes the events that prompted the profession to adopt this position. The finding of greater continuity between prerevolutionary Russian and Soviet physicians suggests that this presumably anomalous case has greater significance for theoretical models of professionalization and occupational prestige than previously supposed.
对于苏联医学职业地位相对较低的传统解释,认为20世纪20年代的布尔什维克政府使一个曾经自主且强大的职业群体丧失了专业性或使其“地位平等化”。本文提供了新的数据,对这一解释提出了挑战。俄罗斯医学职业从未自主且强大过。许多医生因在医疗保健组织方面的共同信念而与布尔什维克合作。到帝国后期,许多医生主张让所有医务工作者参与决策行政机关。作者以俄罗斯精神病医生为重点,分析了促使该职业采取这一立场的事件。革命前的俄罗斯医生与苏联医生之间存在更大连续性这一发现表明,这个看似异常的案例对职业化和职业声望的理论模型具有比以往认为的更大的意义。