A moral economy of care: How clinical discourses perpetuate Indigenous-specific discrimination and racism in western Canadian emergency departments

IF 2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Medical Anthropology Quarterly Pub Date : 2024-05-21 DOI:10.1111/maq.12867
Megan Muller da Silva
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Abstract

Recent research has unveiled the pervasiveness with which Indigenous patients are subjected to racialized stereotypes within the Canadian health system. Because discrimination in health care is associated with poor health outcomes and undertreated illness, there is a need to better understand how racism is perpetuated systemically in order to rectify the policies, practices, and attitudes that enable it. This article outlines a moral economy of care in emergency departments in western Canada by exploring the discourses that medical professionals employ when discussing cases of medical racism. While these discourses respond to the everyday realities of working in hospitals, they are also rooted in the colonial genealogy of health care in Canada and perpetuated by neoliberal shifts in health care services. By exploring the moral economy of care, this article sheds light on the way pervasive discourses contribute to reproducing and circulating Indigenous-specific racism and its role in decision-making.

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护理的道德经济:在加拿大西部的急诊科,临床话语如何使针对土著人的歧视和种族主义长期存在。
最近的研究揭示了土著病人在加拿大医疗系统中普遍受到种族定型观念的影响。由于医疗保健中的歧视与不良的健康结果和未得到及时治疗的疾病有关,因此有必要更好地了解种族主义是如何在系统中持续存在的,以便纠正助长种族主义的政策、做法和态度。本文通过探讨医疗专业人员在讨论医疗种族主义案例时所使用的话语,概述了加拿大西部急诊科护理的道德经济。虽然这些论述是对医院日常工作现实的回应,但它们也植根于加拿大医疗保健的殖民谱系,并因医疗保健服务的新自由主义转变而得以延续。通过探讨医疗的道德经济,本文揭示了普遍存在的话语是如何促成土著特有的种族主义及其在决策中的作用的复制和传播的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.50%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: Medical Anthropology Quarterly: International Journal for the Analysis of Health publishes research and theory in the field of medical anthropology. This broad field views all inquiries into health and disease in human individuals and populations from the holistic and cross-cultural perspective distinctive of anthropology as a discipline -- that is, with an awareness of species" biological, cultural, linguistic, and historical uniformity and variation. It encompasses studies of ethnomedicine, epidemiology, maternal and child health, population, nutrition, human development in relation to health and disease, health-care providers and services, public health, health policy, and the language and speech of health and health care.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Editorial Enacting embryos: Practices, ontologies, and politics of the IVF lab post-Dobbs. "We Only Escort Women to the Health Facility": Traditional birth attendants and the performance of indicator-driven care in rural Tanzania. Futures after Progress: Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore By Chloe AhmannnChicago: University of Chicago Press. 2023. 336 pp.
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