This book goes back to the origins of the transformation of health and
medicine into a business, during the first part of the twentieth
century, focusing on the example of Japan. In the past hundred years,
medicine has gone from being a charitable activity to a large economic
sector, amounting to 12-15% of the GDP in many developed countries, and
one of the fastest-growing businesses around the world. Despite the
mounting presence of the medical industry, there is a lack of academic
work detailing this major transformation. The objective of this book is
to fill this gap and address the following question: how did medicine
become a business? Using over ten years of research in the field,
Pierre-Yves Donzé argues that economic factors and business factors were
decisive in transforming the way that medicine enters our lives. This
book will be of interest to historians of medicine, business historians,
health economists, scholars in medical humanities, and more.