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1.
AMA J Ethics ; 25(1): E66-71, 2023 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36623306

ABSTRACT

Many health care centers make so-called VIP services available to "very important persons" who have the ability to pay. This article discusses common services (eg, concierge primary care, boutique hotel-style hospital stays) offered to VIPs in health care centers and interrogates "trickle down" economic effects, including the exacerbation of inequity in access to health services and the maldistribution of resources in vulnerable communities. This article also illuminates how VIP care contributes to multitiered health service delivery streams that constitute de facto racial segregation and influence clinicians' conceptions of what patients deserve from them in health care settings.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Health Facilities , Humans , Health Services Accessibility
2.
J Trauma Stress ; 35(3): 839-851, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35170100

ABSTRACT

Few studies have described the broader experience of survivors of female genital mutilation or cutting (FGM/C) who have sought asylum in the United States. To gain a better understanding of their exposure to gender-based violence (GBV), the study was conducted to help uncover themes and patterns of co-occurring individual and community factors among women asylum seekers who experienced FGM/C before they arrived in the United States. Following a retrospective chart review of FGM/C cases seen in a human rights clinic, 35 women met the inclusion criteria. The constant comparative method (CCM) was used to develop themes derived from clients' personal declarations and physicians' affidavits. A qualitative analysis revealed extensive histories of violence-physical, psychological, and sexual-demonstrating that FGM/C is only part of a larger arc of violence. Key themes developed via CCM include the experience of FGM/C, cultural attitudes toward FGM/C, cultural attitudes toward women, the lack of agency felt by women, silence around experiences of GBV and the constant reinforcement of that silence, the role of education in women's lives, and acts of resistance and social support. Placing FGM/C within its cultural context allows for a better understanding of its role in society's broader subjugation of women and elucidates how these social structures are maintained. For health care and other service providers, the high frequency of multiple forms of violence and the ingrained nature of women's oppression indicate the need for trauma-informed care and services as well as accessible resources beyond those explicitly related to FGM/C.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Female , Gender-Based Violence , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic , Circumcision, Female/psychology , Female , Human Rights , Humans , Retrospective Studies , United States
3.
J Nerv Ment Dis ; 208(6): 488-497, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32032178

ABSTRACT

On March 11, 2011 ("3/11"), a magnitude 9.0 earthquake in Northeastern Japan triggered a tsunami and nuclear power plant meltdown that killed 16,000 people and displaced more than 470,000 people. Since 2012, a group of volunteer docents from the September 11th Families Association in New York City has traveled throughout Northeastern Japan and held organized meetings where 9/11 and 3/11 survivors share their experiences and stories of trauma as part of an intercultural exchange to promote posttraumatic recovery. We sought to elucidate whether participating 9/11 docents developed a sense of increased resiliency by participating in this international outreach. This study employed photo-taking as well as framing questions, which were developed by 9/11 docents from the August 2016 trip. These questions guided photo-taking and resulting photographs informed discussion in individual and group sharing sessions. This process helped identify codes that guided analysis. Participants acquired a deeper appreciation of their own ability to overcome adversity and experienced a gratifying desire to help 3/11 survivors better cope with their experiences. This narrative photo-taking and group sharing experience demonstrates that a cross-cultural exchange between survivors of different disasters can instill feelings of resilience among participants. It additionally provides early evidence of the efficacy of such an exchange in benefitting disaster survivors in the long term.


Subject(s)
Hope , Photography , Posttraumatic Growth, Psychological , Resilience, Psychological , Survivors/psychology , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Earthquakes , Humans , Japan , Natural Disasters , September 11 Terrorist Attacks , Surveys and Questionnaires , Travel , Tsunamis , United States
4.
J Immigr Minor Health ; 21(3): 483-489, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29968003

ABSTRACT

We sought to evaluate the frequency of anxiety, depression, PTSD, and any experiences of violence in women who had undergone Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (FGM/C) and were seeking asylum in the United States. We undertook a retrospective qualitative descriptive study of FGM/C cases seen in an asylum clinic over a 2-year period. Standardized questionnaires provided quantitative scores for anxiety, depression and PTSD. Clients' personal and physician medical affidavits were analyzed for experiences of violence. Of the 13 cases, anxiety and depression were exhibited by 92 and 100% of women, while all seven women screened for PTSD had symptoms. Qualitative analysis revealed extensive violence perpetrated against these women, demonstrating that FGM/C is only part of the trauma experienced. The high level of mental health disorders and endured violence has implications for providers working with FGM/C survivors and indicates the need for accessible mental health services and trauma-informed care.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/ethnology , Circumcision, Female/psychology , Depression/ethnology , Refugees/psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/ethnology , Adult , Africa South of the Sahara/ethnology , Circumcision, Female/ethnology , Female , Gender-Based Violence , Humans , Qualitative Research , Retrospective Studies , United States/epidemiology
5.
Sociol Health Illn ; 41(1): 128-142, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30084113

ABSTRACT

The financial and capacity pressures facing healthcare systems call for new strategies to deliver high-quality, efficient services. 'Coproduction' is a concept gaining recognition as an approach to create patient partnerships that enable better functioning healthcare systems. Yet, this framing obscures coproduction's 'everyday and unavoidable' character, already part of healthcare service delivery. This paper aims to understand these everyday and unavoidable dimensions of coproduced healthcare services by drawing upon thematic and process analyses of a 15-month ethnography of 45 patients in three HIV clinics in New York. A 'health practices' approach guided exploring patients' activities, their effects on clinical processes, and the conditions surrounding their performances. By constructing a typology of activity types - Building, Accepting, and Objecting - and tracing patients' descriptions of activity performances, the paper shows how coproduction is forged by making and relying upon clinic-based relationships, and for patients also with a broader human community. These dynamics reveal how patients' bodily and temporal understandings are brought into and shape coproduced services. From these insights, we recommend that healthcare practitioners incorporate into their coproduction analytic methods and perspectives to engage patients as capable and aware individuals, who can support clinic efficiencies while producing new delivery possibilities.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/methods , Interpersonal Relations , Patient Participation/psychology , Self-Management , Anthropology, Cultural , HIV Infections/therapy , Humans , New York
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