No Place Like Home: A History of Nursing and Home Care in the United States by Karen Buhler-Wilkerson (Professor of Community Health, University of Pennsylvania)
No Place Like Home sets out to determine why home care, despite its potential as a cost-effective alternative to institutional care, remains a marginalized experiment in care giving. Nurse and historian Karen Buhler-Wilkerson traces the history of home care from its nineteenth-century origins in organized visiting nurses' associations, through a time when professional home care nearly disappeared, on to the 1960s, when a new wave of home care gathered force as physicians, hospital managers, and policy makers responded to economic mandates. Buhler-Wilkerson links local ideas about the formation and function of home-based services to national events and health care agendas, and she gives special attention to care of the dangerous sick, particularly poor immigrants with infectious diseases, and the uninteresting sick-those with chronic illnesses.