This book is a study detailing what happens to people and what
life is like in a rehabilitation program. The program discussed is
embedded in an institution, called "Farewell Hospital" by the
authors, that was designed to fill a demand for facilities for
those judged unable to live on their own. Due to physical or mental
handicaps and no family, friends, or other social agents who are
willing to make a home for them outside of a public institution,
these patients were placed in a rehabilitation unit.
Most patients were placed with the rehabilitation unit as a
brief interlude before their permanent placement in the custodial
unit of the vast institution where they would live out their lives.
This work deals with the question of what happens to patients once
they are rehabilitated and the non-therapeutic rules and practices
of the health and welfare structure of which they are a part. In
this case, the rehabilitation specialists and ward workers set
themselves the task of improving the life chances of their clients
by treating their ailments when possible and by improving their
physical functioning so that they were better able to care for
their own needs.
The authors examine the effects of the organizational
relationships on rehabilitation outcomes and on the lives of the
people who make hospitals their home. The text attempts to sustain
feeling for the historical context of their study the "problem" of
larger numbers of disabled, poverty-stricken persons, who are no
longer wanted by anyone and asserts that a "solution" must be
found.
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