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1.
Med Anthropol Q ; 36(1): 44-63, 2022 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34762740

RESUMEN

As medicine integrates social and structural determinants into health care, some health workers redefine housing as medical treatment. This article discusses how health workers in two U.S. urban safety-net hospitals worked with patients without stable housing. We observed ethnographically how health workers helped patients seek housing in a sharply stratified housing economy. Analyzing in-depth interviews and observations, we show how health workers: (1) understood housing as health care and navigated limits of individual care in a structurally produced housing crisis; and (2) developed and enacted practices of biomedical and sociopolitical stabilization, including eligibilizing and data-tracking work. We discuss how health workers bridged individually focused techniques of clinical care with structural critiques of stratified housing economies despite contradictions in this approach. Finally, we analyze the implications of providers' extension of medical stabilization into social, economic, and political realms, even as they remained caught in the structural dynamics they sought to address.


Asunto(s)
Vivienda , Personas con Mala Vivienda , Antropología Médica , Personal de Salud , Humanos , Proveedores de Redes de Seguridad
2.
Am Ethnol ; 48(4): 474-488, 2021 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35095125

RESUMEN

Health care systems in the United States are experimenting with a form of surveillance and intervention known as "hot spotting," which targets high-cost patients-the so-called "super-utilizers" of emergency departments-with intensive health and social services. Through a calculative deployment of resources to the costliest patients, health care hot spotting promises to simultaneously improve population health and decrease financial expenditures on health care for impoverished people. Through an ethnographic investigation of hot spotting's modes of distribution and its workings in the lives of patients and providers, we find that it targets the same individuals and neighborhoods as the police, who maintain longer-standing practices of hot spotting in zones of racialized urban poverty. This has led to a convergence of caring and punitive strategies of governance. The boundaries between them are shifting as a financialized logic of governance has come to dominate both health and criminal justice. [health care, chronic illness, governance, policing, poverty, United States].

3.
Med Anthropol Q ; 33(2): 173-190, 2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30291726

RESUMEN

Hospitals throughout the United States are implementing new forms of care delivery meant to address social needs for structurally vulnerable patients as a strategy to prevent emergency department visits and hospitalizations and to thereby reduce costs. This article examines how the deployment of social assistance within a neoliberal institutional logic involves the negotiation and alignment of economistic values with ethics of care. We focus on care practices meant to stabilize the socioeconomic conditions of the most expensive patients in the health care system-the "super-utilizers"-through the provisioning of basic resources such as housing, food, transportation, and social support. These patients typically suffer from multiple chronic illnesses accompanied by conditions of poverty, housing and food insecurity, exposure to violence and trauma, and associated substance use and mental health problems. We offer an account of how practices of social assistance are being forged within contexts defined by neoliberal governance.


Asunto(s)
Asistencia Médica , Uso Excesivo de los Servicios de Salud , Proveedores de Redes de Seguridad , Antropología Médica , Análisis Costo-Beneficio , Femenino , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Aceptación de la Atención de Salud , Política , Determinantes Sociales de la Salud , Estados Unidos , Poblaciones Vulnerables
4.
Soc Sci Med ; 247: 112808, 2020 Jan 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32007767

RESUMEN

This article examines how social movements reconceptualized trans-health in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Looking ethnographically to medical and activist practice, the article analyzes "epidemiological biographies", or activist-produced community-based studies blending quantitative and narrative data. It draws on population health, feminist science studies, transgender studies, and social theory to discuss the circulation and implications of these publications. Specifically, it describes how epidemiological biographies disputed health behavioral models by defining state violence and criminalization as primary conditions endangering health and life expectancy among travestis and trans-people. The article analyzes how activist researchers made state violence legible through logics of population health, even as the concept of "population" also emerged from techniques of state control. In contrast with models that place individual behavior at the locus of health interventions, activists instead advanced interventions that contested state securitization and shifted resource distribution. Epidemiological biographies had a considerable effect on national trans-health politics, providing an evidentiary basis for several regulatory shifts. These studies emerged in part through collective political action that reformulated dominant modes of statistical aggregation. This statistical turn-which I call "statistical collectivization"-produced contradictory effects. At one level, it obscured differential conditions of criminalization and violence. At another, it directed attention to the markedly racialized, sexualized, classed, and gendered forms of subjugation that materialize in landscapes of trans-health, and prioritized materially distributive regulation over and above civil protections. Through these contradictory actions, social movements reformulated dominant notions of health by challenging state securitization and contesting state power.

5.
Soc Sci Med ; 220: 49-55, 2019 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30391641

RESUMEN

Our paper explores how legal status stratification shapes the health and health care of low-income patients with chronic illnesses in the U.S. healthcare safety net. Drawing on data from over two years of ethnographic fieldwork at urban safety-net clinics, we examine efforts by Complex Care Management (CCM) teams to stabilize patients with uncontrolled chronic illnesses through primary care-integrated support. We show that stratified citizenship and geographic variability correspond to different possibilities for health care. We suggest an approach to immigration as a structural determinant of health that accounts for the complex, stratified, and changing nature of citizenship status. We also highlight how geographical differences and interactions among local, state, and federal policies support the notion that citizenship is stratified across multiple tiers with distinctive possibilities and constraints for health. While county-based health plans at each of the study sites include residents with varying legal status, lack of formal legal status remains a substantial obstacle to care. Many immigrants are unable to take full advantage of primary and specialty care, resulting in unnecessary morbidity and mortality. In some cases, patients have returned to their country of origin to die. While CCM teams provide an impressive level of support to assist immigrant patients in navigating healthcare and immigration bureaucracies, legal and geographic stratification limit their ability to address broader aspects of these patients' social context.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud , Emigrantes e Inmigrantes/legislación & jurisprudencia , Emigración e Inmigración , Proveedores de Redes de Seguridad/legislación & jurisprudencia , Determinantes Sociales de la Salud , Adulto , Antropología Cultural , Enfermedad Crónica/terapia , Femenino , Hispánicos o Latinos/legislación & jurisprudencia , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Pobreza , Estados Unidos
6.
J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care ; 21(3): 240-55, 2010.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20303797

RESUMEN

Transgender and gender-nonconforming individuals encounter a multitude of barriers to accessing clinically and culturally competent health care. One strategy to increase the quality and competence of care delivery is workplace trainings. This study describes a community-based program for the evaluation of this type of training. Using a mixed-methods approach, the research team assessed the effectiveness of three competency trainings administered by a local nonprofit organization in the Northwest United States. Quantitative data indicated a significant shift in self-assessed knowledge associated with completion of the training. Qualitative data confirmed this result and revealed a number of important themes about the effect of the trainings on providers and their ability to implement knowledge and skills in practice. Clinical considerations are proposed for providers who seek similar trainings and who aim to increase clinical and cultural competency in delivering care to transgender and gender-nonconforming patients and clients.


Asunto(s)
Actitud del Personal de Salud , Competencia Cultural , Homosexualidad , Capacitación en Servicio/organización & administración , Autoeficacia , Transexualidad , Adulto , Anciano , Competencia Clínica , Investigación Participativa Basada en la Comunidad , Competencia Cultural/educación , Competencia Cultural/organización & administración , Curriculum , Evaluación Educacional , Femenino , Conocimientos, Actitudes y Práctica en Salud , Homosexualidad/psicología , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Noroeste de Estados Unidos , Organizaciones sin Fines de Lucro , Evaluación de Programas y Proyectos de Salud , Investigación Cualitativa , Transexualidad/psicología , Transexualidad/terapia
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