二等护理:移民法如何改变安全网的临床实践》(Second-Class Care: How Immigration Law Transforms Clinical Practice in the Safety Net)。

IF 6.3 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Journal of Health and Social Behavior Pub Date : 2024-07-27 DOI:10.1177/00221465241254390
Meredith Van Natta
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文探讨了美国移民法如何延伸到医疗保健安全网中,制定医疗法律暴力,减少非公民的健康机会并改变临床实践。通过对 2015 年至 2020 年美国三个州医护人员的访谈,我提出了一个问题:在一个已经分层的医疗保健系统中,联邦基于公民身份的排斥是如何塑造非公民在安全网机构中的临床轨迹的。通过特别关注癌症治疗,我发现越来越多的反移民联邦政策往往会重塑对患有复杂、危及生命的疾病的非公民的临床实践,因为他们接近 "专科治疗悬崖":(1)造成时间惩罚,使许多非公民长期处于受伤状态;(2)通过移民执法威胁阻止非公民寻求治疗。通过这些过程,医疗法律暴力也给医护人员造成了潜在的道德伤害,他们必须调整临床实践以应对社会法律上的归属界限。
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Second-Class Care: How Immigration Law Transforms Clinical Practice in the Safety Net.

This article examines how U.S. immigration law extends into the health care safety net, enacting medical legal violence that diminishes noncitizens' health chances and transforms clinical practices. Drawing on interviews with health care workers in three U.S. states from 2015 to 2020, I ask how federal citizenship-based exclusions within an already stratified health care system shape the clinical trajectories of noncitizens in safety-net institutions. Focusing specifically on cancer care, I find that increasingly anti-immigrant federal policies often reshape clinical practices toward noncitizens with a complex, life-threatening condition as they approach a "specialty care cliff" by (1) creating time penalties that keep many noncitizens in a protracted state of injury and (2) deterring noncitizens from seeking care through threats of immigration enforcement. Through these processes, medical legal violence also creates the potential for moral injury among health care workers, who must adapt clinical practices in response to socio-legal boundaries of belonging.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.00%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: Journal of Health and Social Behavior is a medical sociology journal that publishes empirical and theoretical articles that apply sociological concepts and methods to the understanding of health and illness and the organization of medicine and health care. Its editorial policy favors manuscripts that are grounded in important theoretical issues in medical sociology or the sociology of mental health and that advance theoretical understanding of the processes by which social factors and human health are inter-related.
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