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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36945709

RESUMO

Since early 2020, life for students has changed tremendously. It has been a time of stress, turmoil, and trauma for students. Researchers from a large Midwestern university wanted to determine how student information use has changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper examines the results of a mixed-methods study undertaken in 2021 using surveys and follow-up focus groups to determine if and how student information use has changed. To answer this, we explored student use of news sources, social media sources, political affiliations, and information responses, coupled with to what extent these factors demonstrate or impact potential changes in information use. We also addressed changes in the frequency of use, as well as the types of resources consulted, pertaining to information use of traditional and social media sources.

2.
Med Anthropol Q ; 33(4): 463-482, 2019 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31218735

RESUMO

As large corporations come to dominate U.S. health care, clinical medicine is increasingly market-driven and governed by business principles. We examine ways in which health insurers and health care systems are transforming the goals and means of clinical practice. Based on ethnographic research of diabetes management in a large health care system, we argue that together these organizations redefine clinical care in terms that prioritize financial goals and managerial logics, above the needs of individual patients. We demonstrate how emphasis on quality metrics reduces clinical work to quantifiable outcomes, redefining diabetes management to be the pursuit of narrowly defined goal numbers, despite often serious health consequences of treatment. As corporate employees, clinicians are compelled to pursue goal numbers by the heavy emphasis payers and health systems place on quality metrics, and accessing the required medications becomes the central focus of clinical practice.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde , Diabetes Mellitus , Seguro Saúde , Antropologia Médica , Medicina Clínica , Atenção à Saúde/economia , Atenção à Saúde/organização & administração , Diabetes Mellitus/economia , Diabetes Mellitus/etnologia , Diabetes Mellitus/terapia , Humanos , Seguro Saúde/economia , Seguro Saúde/organização & administração , Cultura Organizacional
3.
Med Anthropol Q ; 31(3): 403-421, 2017 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28370246

RESUMO

With rapid consolidation of American medicine into large-scale corporations, corporate strategies are coming to the forefront in health care delivery, requiring a dramatic increase in the amount and detail of documentation, implemented through use of electronic health records (EHRs). EHRs are structured to prioritize the interests of a myriad of political and corporate stakeholders, resulting in a complex, multi-layered, and cumbersome health records system, largely not directly relevant to clinical care. Drawing on observations conducted in outpatient specialty clinics, we consider how EHRs prioritize institutional needs manifested as a long list of requisites that must be documented with each consultation. We argue that the EHR enforces the centrality of market principles in clinical medicine, redefining the clinician's role to be less of a medical expert and more of an administrative bureaucrat, and transforming the patient into a digital entity with standardized conditions, treatments, and goals, without a personal narrative.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde/etnologia , Atenção à Saúde/ética , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde/ética , Antropologia Médica , Humanos , Autonomia Profissional
4.
J Bioeth Inq ; 18(3): 477-497, 2021 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34487285

RESUMO

While pharmaceutical industry involvement in producing, interpreting, and regulating medical knowledge and practice is widely accepted and believed to promote medical innovation, industry-favouring biases may result in prioritizing corporate profit above public health. Using diabetes as our example, we review successive changes over forty years in screening, diagnosis, and treatment guidelines for type 2 diabetes and prediabetes, which have dramatically expanded the population prescribed diabetes drugs, generating a billion-dollar market. We argue that these guideline recommendations have emerged under pervasive industry influence and persisted, despite weak evidence for their health benefits and indications of serious adverse effects associated with many of the drugs they recommend. We consider pharmaceutical industry conflicts of interest in some of the research and publications supporting these revisions, and in related standard-setting committees and oversight panels. We raise concern over the long-term impact of these multifaceted involvements. Rather than accept industry conflicts of interest as normal, needing only to be monitored and managed, we suggest challenging that normalcy, and ask: what are the real costs of tolerating such industry participation? We urge the development of a broader focus to fully understand and curtail the systemic nature of industry's influence over medical knowledge and practice.


Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2 , Epidemias , Preparações Farmacêuticas , Conflito de Interesses , Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2/tratamento farmacológico , Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2/epidemiologia , Indústria Farmacêutica , Objetivos , Humanos
5.
Med Anthropol ; 38(3): 224-238, 2019 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29912575

RESUMO

Racial/ethnic identity is contingent and arbitrary, yet it is commonly used to evaluate disease risk and treatment response. Drawing on open-ended interviews with patients and clinicians in two US clinics, we explore how racialized risk is conceptualized and how it impacts patient care and experience. We found that racial/ethnic risk was a common but poorly defined construct for both patients and clinicians, who intermingled concepts of genetics, biology, behavior, and culture, while disregarding historical or structural context. We argue that racializing risk embodies social power in marked and unmarked bodies, reinforcing inequality along racial lines and undermining equitable health care.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde/etnologia , Assistência ao Paciente , Grupos Raciais/etnologia , Racismo/etnologia , Adulto , Idoso , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Fatores de Risco , Responsabilidade Social , Estados Unidos/etnologia , Adulto Jovem
6.
Med Anthropol ; 33(6): 529-45, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24964719

RESUMO

The construction of illness as an inscription on the body of colonization figures importantly among Indigenous community-based service and health care providers. While residential schools and diabetes have both been characterized as products of colonization, little work has been done to examine how they are connected to and informative for health provider practice. The research data presented in this article come from a collaborative urban Indigenous community-based study examining the legacy of negative relationships with food that was instilled in residential schools and used in diabetes intervention. I illustrate how residential school disciplined eating, providing a context for understanding the contemporary production of Indigenous health knowledge and practice in the urban setting, and the diet-related management of diabetes.


Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus/etnologia , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde/etnologia , Indígenas Norte-Americanos/etnologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Antropologia Médica , Canadá/etnologia , Dieta/etnologia , Feminino , Promoção da Saúde , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Instituições Acadêmicas , Adulto Jovem
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