Semiotics 1981 pp 337-343 | Cite as

The Semiotic Crisis in Contemporary Hospitals

  • Joan Y. Kahn

Abstract

The paper which I am about to present has developed from my work during the past year with the Quality of Working Life Unit at McGill University. “Quality of Working Life” (QWL) is an approach to organizational redesign developed at the Tavistock Institute in London by Eric Trist and others during the 1940’s. Its three most basic assumptions are, firstly, that all organizations — be they industrial, educational, governmental, etc. — are open systems sensitive to their changing environments; secondly, that all organizations have two main types of ‘components’, technical and social, both of which must be jointly optimized if the organization is to survive in its environment; and, thirdly, that traditional bureaucratic organizational structures are no longer effective for dealing with our turbulent and rapidly changing social environments.

Keywords

Feminist Movement Hospital Organization Semiotic System Role Flexibility Kitchen Worker 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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References

  1. Reiser, S. J., 1978, “Medicine and the Reign of Technology,” Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
  2. Riese, W., 1953, “The Conception of Disease: Its History, Its Versions, and Its Nature,” Philosophical Library, New York.Google Scholar
  3. Sherwood, J. J. and Pasmore, W. A., eds., 1978, “Sociotechnical Systems: A Sourcebook,” University Associates, San DiegoGoogle Scholar

Copyright information

© Plenum Press, New York 1983

Authors and Affiliations

  • Joan Y. Kahn
    • 1
  1. 1.Quality of Working Life UnitMcGill UniversityMontrealCanada

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