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Infiltrating healthcare : how marketing works underground to influence nurses / Quinn Grundy.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781421426761
  • 1421426765
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Infiltrating healthcare.DDC classification:
  • 610.7306/9 23
LOC classification:
  • RT86.7
NLM classification:
  • WY 16.1
Online resources:
Contents:
Invisible influence : marketing and the most trusted profession -- From sales to service : becoming strategically invisible -- "The perfect friend" : building relationships and becoming indispensable -- The 'as-if' world of nursing practice : nurses, marketing and making decisions -- The "rules of engagement" : creating a moral space within healthcare -- Marketing to nurses matters : how to address commercial influence in healthcare.
Summary: It was once common for pharmaceutical companies and medical device makers to treat doctors to lavish vacations or give them new cars; companies would do virtually anything to buy influence so that their medications or devices would be used in a doctor's office or hospital. But with growing public scrutiny of kickbacks to doctors, the huge giveaways have disappeared. In Infiltrating Healthcare, Quinn Grundy shows that sales representatives are working instead behind the scenes. It is to nurses that these companies now market. Nurses, Grundy argues, are the perfect target for sales reps: their work is largely invisible and frequently undervalued, yet they wield a great deal of influence over treatment and purchasing decisions. Furthermore, there are no legal restrictions on marketing to most nurses. Grundy describes how, under the guise of education or product support, and through gifts and free samples, sales representatives influence nurses in the course of day-to-day clinical practice. Grundy argues that the very presence of sales reps in operating rooms, purchasing committee meetings, and patient care units blurs the boundaries between patient care and medical sales. Helpfully, she also describes ways that nurses can be aware of (and resistant to) their influence. Infiltrating Healthcare is a call to action to protect the clinical spaces where we are at our most vulnerable—and the decisions that take place there—from the pursuit of profit at any cost. This is a timely book that shines a light on a practice that often goes unseen, and which has tangible implications for healthcare policy and practice. -- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Electronic Book Electronic Book Kuakarun Nursing Library Processing unit WY 16.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online Access Eb33735
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Invisible influence : marketing and the most trusted profession -- From sales to service : becoming strategically invisible -- "The perfect friend" : building relationships and becoming indispensable -- The 'as-if' world of nursing practice : nurses, marketing and making decisions -- The "rules of engagement" : creating a moral space within healthcare -- Marketing to nurses matters : how to address commercial influence in healthcare.

It was once common for pharmaceutical companies and medical device makers to treat doctors to lavish vacations or give them new cars; companies would do virtually anything to buy influence so that their medications or devices would be used in a doctor's office or hospital. But with growing public scrutiny of kickbacks to doctors, the huge giveaways have disappeared. In Infiltrating Healthcare, Quinn Grundy shows that sales representatives are working instead behind the scenes. It is to nurses that these companies now market. Nurses, Grundy argues, are the perfect target for sales reps: their work is largely invisible and frequently undervalued, yet they wield a great deal of influence over treatment and purchasing decisions. Furthermore, there are no legal restrictions on marketing to most nurses. Grundy describes how, under the guise of education or product support, and through gifts and free samples, sales representatives influence nurses in the course of day-to-day clinical practice. Grundy argues that the very presence of sales reps in operating rooms, purchasing committee meetings, and patient care units blurs the boundaries between patient care and medical sales. Helpfully, she also describes ways that nurses can be aware of (and resistant to) their influence. Infiltrating Healthcare is a call to action to protect the clinical spaces where we are at our most vulnerable—and the decisions that take place there—from the pursuit of profit at any cost. This is a timely book that shines a light on a practice that often goes unseen, and which has tangible implications for healthcare policy and practice. -- Provided by publisher.

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