韩国长期护理医院与老年护理的变革

S. Na
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引用次数: 1

摘要

直到最近,在韩国,父母年迈的儿童面临的核心困境是如何以及由谁照顾他们的父母。按照孝顺的准则,长子过去常常承担责任。然而,随着最近长期护理医院的激增,这种安排正在发生变化。这些机构发挥着康复医院、长期护理中心和疗养院的综合作用,接纳不需要积极医疗干预的老年人。政府对这些医院的推广,集中在放松管制、职能模糊以及缺乏替代护理设施上,导致了该行业的扩张,从而导致了许多此类机构的“护理人性化”。虽然这些医院缓解了与人口老龄化相关的压力,但它们的主流化对医疗保健、医学和老年人的生活产生了影响。医院领域已经商业化,医疗实践正在转型,老年人的尊严正在因住院而丧失。在这个新的照顾制度中,孝道本身正在经历转变——从一种支持照顾本土化的意识形态,转变为遵守服务的市场习惯。在这篇文章中,我介绍了这些医院,并调查了它们的发展如何带来了韩国式的养老商品化,揭示了医疗私有化和福利新自由化的暗流。
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Long-term Care Hospitals and Changing Elderly Care in South Korea
Until recently in South Korea, the central dilemma facing children with ageing parents was how and by whom their parents should be cared for. In accordance with the norm of filial piety, the eldest son used to take responsibility. However, with the recent proliferation of long-term care hospitals, this arrangement is changing. These institutions, which play the combined role of rehabilitative hospital, long-term care centre, and nursing home, admit elderly people who do not require active medical intervention. The government’s promotion of these hospitals, centred on deregulation, ambiguity around their function, and the lack of alternative care facilities, has led to an expansion of the sector and consequently to the ‘nursing hom(e)fication’ of many of these institutions. While these hospitals ease the pressures associated with an ageing population, their mainstreaming has had an impact on healthcare, medicine, and the lives of elderly people. The hospital field has become commercialised, medical practice is being transformed, and the dignity of elderly people is being lost through hospitalisation. In this new care regime, filial piety itself is undergoing transformation—from an ideology underpinning the domestication of care, to the market idiom of service compliance. In this article, I introduce these hospitals and investigate how their growth has brought about a Korean style of elderly care commodification, revealing the undercurrents of healthcare privatisation and the neoliberalisation of welfare.
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