journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38153907/for-better-or-worse-governing-healthcare-organisations-in-times-of-financial-distress
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tessa S van Dijk, Martijn Felder, Richard T J M Janssen, Wilma K van der Scheer
Due to processes of financialisation, financial parties increasingly penetrate the healthcare domain and determine under which conditions care is delivered. Their influence becomes especially visible when healthcare organisations face financial distress. By zooming-in on two of such cases, we come to know more about the considerations, motives and actions of financial parties in healthcare. In this research, we were able to examine the social dynamics between healthcare executives, banks and health insurers involved in a Dutch hospital and mental healthcare organisation on the verge of bankruptcy...
December 28, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38153853/the-historical-sociology-of-medicine-in-india-introduction-to-the-special-section
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Roger Jeffery, David S Jones, Kiran Kumbhar
This introduction to a special section brings together three papers first presented at a panel, 'Medical Professions in South Asia: Historical and Contemporary Analyses', at the 26th European Conference on South Asian Studies, held in Vienna, Austria and online, in July 2021. All three papers deal with aspects of the professionalisation of biomedical doctors in India since its independence in 1947. The authors bring together historical and sociological approaches to illuminate the growth of specialisms, patterns of practitioner-patient interactions and efforts to maintain occupational closure and maintain status in the face of growing challenges...
December 28, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38149851/satisficing-death-ageing-and-end-of-life-preparation-among-transgender-older-americans
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nik M Lampe
A good death-a normative ideology of living and dying well that may allow an individual to gain awareness, acceptance, and preparation for death-has captured the attention of researchers, clinicians, and policymakers in recent years. Prior sociological research has uncovered nuanced perspectives of a good death, yet there has been minimal exploration into how marginalised communities reconstruct their own ideals of a good death in response to structural and institutional inequities. Utilising data from 47 in-depth interviews, I examine how transgender older adults perceive and plan for ageing and end-of-life experiences through advance care planning...
December 27, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38149776/gendering-the-beginning-of-life-taiwanese-gay-fathers-navigation-of-preimplantation-genetic-diagnosis-assisted-sex-selection-in-transnational-third-party-reproduction
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jung Chen
Preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) has been used not only to avoid genetic diseases and increase conception success rates but also to perform non-medical sex selection, particularly in the surging cross-border reproductive care (CBRC). In the context of commercialised biomedicine, assisted reproductive technologies, such as lifestyle sex selection, have been tailored to meet intended parents' preferences. However, there is a lack of analysis on how individuals' reproductive decisions on PGD-assisted sex selection were shaped within the sociocultural norms and CBRC...
December 27, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38141013/health-inequalities-among-people-experiencing-food-insecurity-an-intersectional-approach
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nick Drydakis
The study examines the socioeconomic determinants of physical health among populations experiencing food insecurity and receiving free meals in soup kitchens in the Prefecture of Attica, Greece. Data were collected from the same six soup kitchens in 2012, 2017 and 2021, resulting in a dataset of 1533 observations. The study revealed that periods characterised by an economic recession are associated with deteriorated physical health of food-insecure people. Moreover, the study found that physical health deteriorations among food-insecure people are associated with older age, female gender, immigration status, disability and/or long-term health conditions, LGBT status, unemployment, economic inactivity, homelessness, living below the poverty threshold, long-term food dependency, illicit drug consumption and residing in lower- and middle-class areas...
December 23, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38133530/talking-cervixes-how-times-materialise-during-the-first-stage-of-labour
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Siân M Beynon-Jones, Clare Jackson
The clock occupies a prominent position in many feminist and midwifery critiques of the medicalisation of labour and birth. Concern has long focused on the production of standardised 'progress' during labour via the expectation that once in 'established' labour, birthing people's cervixes should dilate at a particular rate, measurable in centimetres and clock time. In this article we draw on 37 audio- or video-recordings of women labouring in two UK midwife-led units in NHS hospital settings to develop a more nuanced critique of the way in which times materialise during labour...
December 22, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38078806/intimate-networks-of-care-perceptions-of-intergenerational-family-care-and-experiences-of-ageing-among-chinese-midlife-and-older-lesbians-and-gay-men
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iris Po Yee Lo, Emma H Liu, Daniel W L Lai, Elsie Yan
This article examines how lesbians and gay men imagine and build their 'intimate networks of care' and negotiate moral expectations towards intergenerational family care as they age. To date, little is known about the strength and complexities of different intimate ties or the role of intergenerational dynamics in shaping ageing sexual minority people's care needs and choices. Based on narrative interviews with ageing Chinese lesbians and gay men, the findings reveal their experiences of constantly juggling their ties with families of origin, moral values around intergenerational care and the urge to receive support from and offer support to chosen networks of people...
December 11, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38078800/hui-beautiful-scars
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fran Kewene, Alexandra King, Teramira Schutz, Annemarie Jutel, Jessica Young
This article is the written account of a discussion between a group of indigenous women (trained both in Western and Indigenous knowledge systems), on the relevance of diagnosis in their conceptualisations of health and illness.
December 11, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38078784/tinkering-with-symptoms-causes-and-solutions-tracing-the-enactments-of-multiple-chronic-illnesses-in-specialised-outpatient-check-ups
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Louise Skovgaard, Marianne Johansson Jørgensen, Tine Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, Mette Terp Høybye
People living with multiple chronic illnesses and an increasing need for acute care is a global health challenge, which questions the conventional ways of managing illness. A central issue is how medical practices can become more patient-centred and aligned with the everyday life of patients. Communicative strategies for eliciting the patient's goals and preferences are often proposed. In this article, we draw on ethnographic data from fieldwork conducted during 2019-2020 in health-care settings and among people living with multiple chronic illness(es) and repeated acute admissions in Denmark...
December 11, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38069691/compelled-loneliness-and-necessitated-social-isolation-it-s-like-being-on-the-other-side-of-a-mirror-just-looking-in
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natalie Wotherspoon
This article develops the conceptualisation of loneliness by drawing on 42 accounts of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME). While illness experience is a central concern of the sociology of health and illness, experiences of loneliness alongside contested and chronic illness have received less attention. The analysis illustrates how loneliness can be an integral part of living with ME and offers two novel conceptual contributions - necessitated social isolation and compelled loneliness. Necessitated social isolation concerns how ME symptoms can make social lives increasingly restricted...
December 9, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38063484/claiming-or-abdicating-medical-authority-treatment-recommendation-actions-doctor-patient-relationship-and-antibiotic-overprescription-in-chinese-paediatrics
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nan Christine Wang
Antibiotic overprescription in China has long been considered a problem on the supply side, linked to the financial incentives of physicians. Based on the conversation analysis of 187 video-recorded naturally occurring medical consultations in Chinese paediatric primary care settings, this study finds that the driving force behind the problem of antibiotic overprescription in China has changed. Physicians use a low-authority communication style to recommend treatment, displaying a low level of medical authority and a willingness to accommodate caregivers' preferences in antibiotic prescribing decisions...
December 8, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37994180/epistemic-injustice-in-experiences-of-young-people-with-parents-with-mental-health-challenges
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Scott Yates, Brenda Gladstone, Kim Foster, Anneli Silvén Hagström, Andrea Reupert, Lotti O'Dea, Rose Cuff, Violette McGaw, Rochelle Hine
Amongst the impacts of growing up with a parent with mental health challenges is the experience of stigma-by-association, in which children and young people experience impacts of stigmatisation due to their parent's devalued identity. This article seeks to expand our understanding of this issue through an abductive analysis of qualitative data collected through a codesign process with young people. Results indicate that young people's experiences of stigmatisation can be effectively understood as experiences of epistemic injustice...
November 22, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37966700/value-based-health-care-in-translation-from-global-popularity-to-primary-care-for-dutch-elderly-patients
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gijs Steinmann, Hester van de Bovenkamp, Antoinette de Bont, Diana Delnoij
In this article we examine the fragmented interpretation and implementation of a remarkably popular concept, value-based health care (VBHC). By building on a case study of a project team working on the development of value-based primary care services for elderly patients, we shed new light on the way in which VBHC transitions from theory to practice. The concept of 'translation' is used to theoretically frame our analysis. Between June 2021 and May 2022, we gathered data through participant observation (50 h), semi-structured interviews (n = 20) and document analysis (n = 16)...
November 15, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37962985/how-a-good-parent-decides-on-childhood-vaccination-demonstrating-independence-and-deliberation-during-dutch-healthcare-visits
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Prettner, Hedwig Te Molder, Bogdana Humă
Childhood vaccination consultations are considered an important phase in parents' decision-making process. To date, only a few empirical studies conducted in the United States have investigated real-life consultations. To address this gap, we recorded Dutch vaccination conversations between healthcare providers and parents during routine health consultations for their newborns. The data were analysed using Conversation Analysis and Discursive Psychology. We found that the topic of vaccination was often initiated with 'Have you already thought about vaccination?' (HYATAV), and that this formulation was consequential for parental identity work...
November 14, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37957129/multimorbidity-as-chronic-crisis-living-on-with-multiple-long-term-health-conditions-in-a-socially-disadvantaged-london-borough
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Esca van Blarikom, Nina Fudge, Deborah Swinglehurst
Contemporary health services are primarily designed around single diseases. People with multimorbidity (multiple long-term health conditions) often become burdened by accumulated treatments. Through multimodal fieldwork in a socially disadvantaged London borough, we explore how people living with multimorbidity navigate conditions of 'chronic crisis', encompassing ill-health, overmedicalisation, polypharmacy and social exclusion. Participants in our study frequently experience 'existential stuckness', exacerbated by processes of social exclusion...
November 13, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37897708/doing-and-undoing-transgender-health-care-the-ordering-of-gender-dysphoria-in-clinical-practice
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wolter de Boer, Bert C Molewijk, Marijke A Bremmer, Baudewijntje P C Kreukels, Eileen M Moyer, Karl Gerritse
A formal Gender Dysphoria classification- as outlined in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders- is a prerequisite for the reimbursement of both gender-affirming medical care and transgender mental health care in the Netherlands. Gender Dysphoria and its conceptual precursors have always been moving targets: moving due to research, policy, care practices and activism both within and outside of medicine. This raises the question of what Gender Dysphoria is exactly. To elucidate this question, we turn to the people who use the concept in clinical practice to come to a diagnosis and treatment indication: mental health professionals working in gender-affirming medical care and transgender mental health care...
October 28, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37879907/ethnic-inequalities-in-age-related-patterns-of-multiple-long-term-conditions-in-england-analysis-of-primary-care-and-nationally-representative-survey-data
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brenda Hayanga, Mai Stafford, Catherine L Saunders, Laia Bécares
Little is known about the patterning of multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs) by age, ethnicity and across conceptualisations of MLTCs (e.g. MLTCs with/without mental health conditions [MHCs]). We examined ethnic inequalities in age-related patterns of MLTCs, and combinations of physical and MHCs using the English GP Patient Survey and Clinical Practice Research Datalink. We described the association between MLTCs and age using multilevel regression models adjusting for sex and area-level deprivation with patients nested within GP practices...
October 25, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37861364/companions-contributions-to-information-gathering-in-chinese-outpatient-clinical-interaction
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shuai Zhang, Meili Cheng, Wen Ma
Patients are commonly accompanied to visit clinicians in Chinese outpatient clinics. Although there has been extensive research on the roles of companions in asymmetric interactions within medical settings, there is a paucity of conversation analytic studies that examine the active participation and contributions of companions on an equal footing in medical consultations. How companions on an equal footing participate and contribute in Chinese outpatient clinical consultations remains under-explored. By employing video recordings of three-party consultations in the Chinese orthopaedic outpatient clinic as the data and adopting conversation analysis as the method, this study investigated how companions participated in and contributed to the information-gathering activity and how their contributions were interactionally negotiated and managed by clinicians and adult patients over sequences of interaction...
October 20, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37843508/-planning-for-a-healthy-baby-and-a-healthy-pregnancy-a-critical-analysis-of-canadian-clinical-practice-guidelines-for-the-treatment-of-opioid-dependence-during-pregnancy
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fiona S Martin, Meghan Gosse, Emma Whelan
As opioid fatalities rise in North America, the need to improve the supports available to those who are dependent on opioids and pregnant has become more urgent. This paper discusses the social organisation of drug treatment supports for those who are pregnant, using Canadian clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) for methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) as a case study. Pregnant patients are a priority population for MMT, both in Canada and internationally; the regulatory bodies that oversee MMT in Canada are the provincial Colleges of Physician and Surgeons and Health Canada...
October 16, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37818881/the-diffusion-of-diagnosis-and-its-implications-for-the-epistemology-and-ontology-of-disease
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yishai Barth, Darin Weinberg
Rather than confining the categories health and sickness to a biomedical conception of the biological organism, there is growing recognition of epistemological and ontological multiplicity in the realm of diagnosis and, indeed, in the very realm of disease itself. In short, the empirical manifestations of health and illness as well as the processes thought to cause them are now understood to assume a much wider variety of both biological and other forms. This essay considers the underlying epistemological and ontological opportunities and challenges of taking what we are calling this diffusion of diagnosis seriously...
October 11, 2023: Sociology of Health & Illness
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