Taming the Bureaucrat
Book Details
Author(s)Grumet M.D, Gerald W
PublisherAuthorhouse
ISBN / ASIN1401028101
ISBN-139781401028107
AvailabilityIn Stock
Sales Rank396,429
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
"Taming the Bureaucrat" begins with one physician's curiosity about the increasing bureaucratization of medicine and concludes that bureaucratic systems cast a wide shadow over virtually all aspects of modern society - the legal system, government agencies, religious bodies, financial institutions, military organizations, etc.
The common thread is the prevalence of the "structured" personality whose iron grip on society has become ever more powerful in the Information Age. Bureaucracies can quickly become criminalized as occurred in fascist countries in the World War II era.
The volume concludes with suggestions for controlling bureaucracy that is flourishing in the 21st century, and threatens to expand dramatically if left unchecked.
About the Author: Gerald W. Grumet, M.D. is a psychiatrist in Rochester, NY who found himself increasingly ensnarled in paperwork as the era of Managed Care began to take hold in the 1980s. Minor bookkeeping chores which had previously taken minutes began to consume hours. While most physicians use professional billing clerks to interact with health insurers, Grumet put himself on the front lines, doing his own clerical chores in search for answers. His research led him to conclude that the central problem of bureaucracy is the rigid or obsessional personalities that form the functional core of advanced societies.
The common thread is the prevalence of the "structured" personality whose iron grip on society has become ever more powerful in the Information Age. Bureaucracies can quickly become criminalized as occurred in fascist countries in the World War II era.
The volume concludes with suggestions for controlling bureaucracy that is flourishing in the 21st century, and threatens to expand dramatically if left unchecked.
About the Author: Gerald W. Grumet, M.D. is a psychiatrist in Rochester, NY who found himself increasingly ensnarled in paperwork as the era of Managed Care began to take hold in the 1980s. Minor bookkeeping chores which had previously taken minutes began to consume hours. While most physicians use professional billing clerks to interact with health insurers, Grumet put himself on the front lines, doing his own clerical chores in search for answers. His research led him to conclude that the central problem of bureaucracy is the rigid or obsessional personalities that form the functional core of advanced societies.
