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1.
Front Sociol ; 8: 1185487, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38077991

ABSTRACT

The sustained governmental assault on the National Health Service (NHS) in England during post-1970s financialised or rentier capitalism has received considerable attention by the research community. There is some evidence, however, that many of those members of the public who have not had occasion to use the NHS remain largely ill-informed about the extent of, and reasons for, its present troubles. In this paper I offer an auto/biographic account of my own recent experiences as a patient with type 2 diabetes and subsequent polymyalgia in both primary and secondary care. I then deploy analytic induction to consider, and explain, my personal travails against the background of the shifting nature of doctor-patient interaction occasioned by governmental politics in relation to the NHS. The result is an illustrated story of the decline of health care at a political juncture when the ever-expanding capital assets of a tiny minority of the population trumps the health care needs of the population as a whole. The present impoverishment of management and care must be understood with reference to wider aspects of macro-social change. The paper concludes with some ideas about how to (re)fund a severely ailing NHS.

2.
Front Sociol ; 6: 789906, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35187156

ABSTRACT

In this paper I ground a brief account of the impact of COVID-19 on the United Kingdom in an understanding of a decade of austerity politics from 2010 to 2020, itself a product of the advent and consolidation of post-1970s financialised or rentier capitalism. I argue that such an analysis is essential if realistic plans are to be laid for a "better"-understood here as a more equitable or "fairer"-society. I go on to consider the contributions that sociology can, and arguably should, make to this end. This involves a range of engagements from scholarship at one end of the spectrum to action or muckraking sociology at the other. In addition to plotting a role for sociology, I suggest a set of criteria for recognizing a "fairer society"; postulate a series of institutional reforms that might characterize the attainment of such a society; and outline and confront social structural, cultural and agential obstacles to its realization. A theme running throughout the paper is that the delineation and promulgation of the "good society" remains central to any credible-that is, post-Enlightenment reconstruction of - the sociological project.

3.
Health Sociol Rev ; 29(2): 140-148, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33411650

ABSTRACT

In this brief paper, I argue that the coronavirus pandemic is functioning like an ethnomethodological 'breaching experiment'. In short, it is putting a gigantic spanner in the works of neoliberal governance, in the process exposing the widening cracks and fissures of what I have called the 'fractured society'. I begin by recalling Garfinkel's notion of the breaching experiment and by listing the principal attributes of the fractured society. I then explore the response to the coronavirus in the UK, from the government's initial commitment to 'herd immunity' to its present policy of 'muddling through'. The bulk of the remainder of this contribution addresses precisely how this global health crisis shines a harsh and unforgiving searchlight on the strategies and policies pursued by governments in the UK since 2010, and most especially after the passing of the Health and Social Care Act of 2012. In the closing paragraphs, I examine possible scenarios for a post-fractured society, making particular use of Fraser's concepts on 'reactionary' versus 'progressive populism', and conclude with a comment on sociology and engagement.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Capitalism , Politics , Sociology , State Medicine , Global Health , Humans , Immunity, Herd , SARS-CoV-2 , United Kingdom/epidemiology
5.
Soc Sci Med ; 197: 87-94, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29222999

ABSTRACT

While mental illness is a significant health challenge worldwide, the availability of specialists is limited, especially in rural areas and for psychiatric emergencies. Although tele-psychiatry, via real-time videoconferencing (VC), is used to provide consultative services in areas that lack psychiatrists, there are a paucity of studies on the use of VC for psychiatric emergencies. We examine how VC matters for patient involvement and professional practice in the first Norwegian emergency tele-psychiatric service. Through a decentralised on-call system, psychiatrists are accessible 24/7 by telephone and VC for patients and nurses in regional psychiatry centres. Based on 29 interviews with patients, psychiatrists and nurses, this article addresses how participation is fostered by VC, and how it may change the social dynamics of therapeutic emergency encounters. We identified four contributions of the 'video-mediated gaze' in the therapeutic encounter including those of the: (1) immediacy of assessment, (2) increased transparency, (3) sense of access to the 'real' expert, and (4) fostering of the patient's 'voice' in therapeutic decisions. These VC inflections of the therapeutic encounter are a mix of the pragmatic (1 and 2) and the symbolic (3 and 4), assembling in these contexts to foster patient-centeredness. With a sociological approach to video-conferenced emergency psychiatry, the identification of symbolic affordances adds necessary nuances to the application of new technologies into fragile therapeutic communication.


Subject(s)
Emergency Services, Psychiatric/methods , Mental Disorders/therapy , Psychiatry , Videoconferencing/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Norway , Patient Participation/psychology , Rural Health Services , Workforce , Young Adult
6.
Qual Health Res ; 27(13): 1924-1935, 2017 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27909252

ABSTRACT

We are likely moving rapidly toward a post-antibiotic era, as a result of escalating antimicrobial resistance, rapidly declining antibiotic production and profligate overuse. Hitherto research has almost exclusively focused on doctors' prescribing, with nurses' roles in antibiotic use remaining virtually invisible. Drawing on interviews with 30 nurses, we focus on nurses as brokers of doctors' antibiotic decisions, nursing capacity to challenge doctors' decisions, and, "back stage" strategies for circumnavigating organizational constraints. We argue that nurses occupy an essential and conscious position as brokers within the hospital; a subject position that is not neutral, facilitates (short-term) cohesion, and involves the pursuit of particular (preferred) nursing outcomes. Illustrating how authority can be diffuse, mediated by institutionalized praxis, and how professionals evade attempts to govern their practice, we challenge the reification of physician prescribing power, arguing that it may work against the utilization of nurses as important stakeholders in the future of antibiotics.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Clinical Decision-Making/methods , Medical Staff, Hospital/organization & administration , Nursing Staff, Hospital/organization & administration , Professional Role , Anti-Bacterial Agents/administration & dosage , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Drug Utilization/standards , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Medical Staff, Hospital/psychology , Nurse's Role , Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology , Patient Advocacy , Practice Patterns, Physicians'
7.
Soc Sci Med ; 146: 95-103, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26513118

ABSTRACT

The misuse of antibiotics has become a major public health problem given the global threat of multi-resistant organisms and an anticipated 'antimicrobial perfect storm' within the next few decades. Despite recent attempts by health service providers to optimise antibiotic usage, widespread inappropriate use of antibiotics continues in hospitals internationally. In this study, drawing on qualitative interviews with Australian pharmacists, we explore how they engage in antibiotic decisions in the hospital environment. We develop a sociological understanding of pharmacy as situated within evolving interprofessional power relations, inflected by an emerging milieu whereby antibiotic optimisation is organisationally desired but interprofessionally constrained. We argue that the case of antibiotics articulates important interprofessional asymmetries, positioning pharmacists as delimited negotiators within the context of medical prescribing power. We conclude that jurisdictional uncertainties, and the resultant interprofessional dynamics between pharmacy and medicine, are vital delimiting factors in the emerging role of pharmacists as 'antimicrobial stewards' in the hospital environment. Moreover, we argue that a nuanced understanding of the character of interprofessional negotiations is key to improving the use of antibiotics within and beyond the hospital.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Interprofessional Relations/ethics , Medical Overuse/prevention & control , Pharmacists , Pharmacy Service, Hospital , Anti-Bacterial Agents/adverse effects , Attitude of Health Personnel , Australia , Drug Resistance, Bacterial/drug effects , Humans , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Qualitative Research , Sociology, Medical
9.
Soc Sci Med ; 123: 210-6, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25043559

ABSTRACT

In this paper we revisit the notion of civil society in the light of recent attempts to privatize health care in England via the passing of the Health and Social Care Act of 2013. This legislation promises a re-commodification of the National Health Service (NHS) in England. The Bill was bitterly contested during its passage through parliament, most vigorously in 2011. Much of the opposition occurred at a time of widespread, global rebellion, most notably in the 'Arab uprisings' and through the 'occupy movement'. Despite a plethora of protests, we argue, a non-porous boundary between what we call the 'protest sector' of civil society and the wider public sphere of the lifeworld has become apparent in England. A good deal of collective action, whether campaign-focused (like opposition to the Health and Social Care Bill) or more generalized (like rejections of corporate greed), has so far proved ineffective, at least in the short-term; no crisis of legitimation is apparent. We highlight a new 'class/command dynamic', leading to oligarchic rule, in the present era of financial capitalism. We use this health care case-study to re-examine the notion of civil society and its changing properties in what Castells calls a 'networked society'. The contribution ends with a discussion of the role of the sociologist re-civil society and the advocacy of both 'action' and 'foresight sociologies'.


Subject(s)
Health Care Reform/legislation & jurisprudence , Models, Theoretical , Privatization , State Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Delivery of Health Care/legislation & jurisprudence , England , Policy Making , Private Sector , Wales
10.
Health (London) ; 17(3): 266-83, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22801877

ABSTRACT

Obesity (or being overweight) is now considered a by-product of membership of developed societies. Moreover, it is considered a growing 'global' health problem. This article reports on a small qualitative study of adults who fell into one or other of these categories in Norway in 2010, and who have been faced with decisions about lifestyle versus surgical remedies. This decision making is contextualized and the principal criteria examined. Embodiment, bodywork, self- and social identity, stigma, deviance and issues around the idea of personal responsibility and public health emerge as key themes. The concluding paragraphs commend incorporation of a macro- or social structural perspective to the conceptualization and investigation of obesity.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Bariatric Surgery/psychology , Obesity, Morbid/psychology , Self Concept , Shame , Social Stigma , Adult , Bariatric Surgery/adverse effects , Bariatric Surgery/standards , Decision Making , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Moral Obligations , Norway , Obesity/psychology , Obesity/therapy , Obesity, Morbid/surgery , Obesity, Morbid/therapy , Overweight/psychology , Overweight/therapy , Qualitative Research , Weight Reduction Programs/methods , Weight Reduction Programs/standards , Young Adult
11.
Sociology ; 47(1): 142-156, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25076798

ABSTRACT

Few sociologists dissent from the notion that the mid- to late 1970s witnessed a shift in capitalism's modus operandi. Its association with a rapid increase of social and material inequality is beyond dispute. This article opens with a brief summation of contemporary British trends in economic inequalities, and finds an echo of these trends in health inequalities. It is suggested that the sociology of health inequalities in Britain lacks an analysis of agency, and that such an analysis is crucial. A case is made that the recent critical realist contribution of Margaret Archer on 'internal conversations' lends itself to an understanding of agency that is salient here. The article develops her typology of internal conversations to present characterizations of the 'focused autonomous reflexives' whose mind-sets are causally efficacious for producing and reproducing inequalities, and the 'dedicated meta-reflexives' whose casts of mind might yet predispose them to mobilize resistance to inequalities.

12.
Sociol Health Illn ; 34(1): 130-46, 2012 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21929656

ABSTRACT

The evidence bearing on the nature and extent of health inequalities documented globally and in the UK is addressed, twin foci within the UK being (a) associations between socioeconomic classification and health and longevity, and (b) the notion of a 'social gradient'. A consideration of the various 'models' that have been developed by sociologists and their allies - most conspicuously social epidemiologists - to account for (a) and (b) is offered, drawing on government-sponsored commissions and reviews as well as the peer-reviewed literature. This is followed by a portrayal of specifically sociological theories of health inequalities, featuring those that hold social structures as well as cultural shifts in convention and behaviour to be causally efficacious for health inequalities. The summary and conclusions of the review incorporate an outline of pertinent questions the sociological community has so far been reluctant to address and an agenda for future research.


Subject(s)
Health Status Disparities , Longevity , Cultural Characteristics , Financing, Government , Health Behavior , Health Services Accessibility/organization & administration , Humans , Public Health Administration/economics , Public Health Administration/methods , Residence Characteristics , Socioeconomic Factors , Sociology, Medical , United Kingdom
13.
AIDS Res Treat ; 2012: 371482, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23346389

ABSTRACT

HIV prevalence in India remains high among female sex workers. This paper presents the main findings of a qualitative study of the modes of operation of female sex work in Belgaum district, Karnataka, India, incorporating fifty interviews with sex workers. Thirteen sex work settings (distinguished by sex workers' main places of solicitation and sex) are identified. In addition to previously documented brothel, lodge, street, dhaba (highway restaurant), and highway-based sex workers, under-researched or newly emerging sex worker categories are identified, including phone-based sex workers, parlour girls, and agricultural workers. Women working in brothels, lodges, dhabas, and on highways describe factors that put them at high HIV risk. Of these, dhaba and highway-based sex workers are poorly covered by existing interventions. The paper examines the HIV-related vulnerability factors specific to each sex work setting. The modes of operation and HIV-vulnerabilities of sex work settings identified in this paper have important implications for the local programme.

15.
Sociol Health Illn ; 31(3): 441-55, 2009 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19366430

ABSTRACT

The concept of stigma, denoting relations of shame, has a long ancestry and has from the earliest times been associated with deviations from the 'normal', including, in various times and places, deviations from normative prescriptions of acceptable states of being for self and others. This paper dwells on modern social formations and offers conceptual and theoretical pointers towards a more convincing contemporary sociology of health-related stigma. It starts with an appreciation and critique of Goffman's benchmark sensitisation and traces his influence on the personal tragedy or deviance paradigm dominant in the medical sociology from the 1970s. To allow for the development of an argument, the focus here is on specific types of disorder--principally, epilepsy and HIV--rather than the research literature as a whole. Brief and critical consideration is given to attempts to operationalise or otherwise 'measure' health-related stigma. The advocacy of a rival oppression paradigm by disability theorists from the 1980s, notably through re-workings of the social model of disability, is addressed. It is suggested that we are now in a position to learn and move on from this paradigm 'clash'. A re-framing of notions of relations of stigma, signalling shame, and relations of deviance, signalling blame, is proposed. This framework, and the positing of a variable and changing dynamic between cultural norms of shame and blame--always embedded in social structures of class, command, gender, ethnicity and so on--is utilised to explore recent approaches to health stigma reduction programmes.


Subject(s)
Health Status , Stereotyping , Chronic Disease , Humans , Sociology, Medical
16.
Soc Sci Med ; 68(3): 519-25, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19054601

ABSTRACT

The considerable emphasis in the development and implementation of clinical information systems in hospitals internationally seems to have had a limited effect. In particular, the implementation of electronic patient record (EPR) systems has been slower and more difficult than anticipated and with little change in efficiency and security. This paper suggests why this might be the case. Well established research findings within the field of computer supported cooperative work (CSCW--an interdisciplinary research field between informatics and the social sciences) are cited to construct a case for greater awareness of (1) inter- and intra-professional interests, and (2) broader social and health policy contexts. We draw on Gouldner's work [(1957). Cosmopolitans and locals: toward an analysis of latent social roles--I. Administrative Science Quarterly, 2(3), 281-306; (1958). Cosmopolitans and locals: toward an analysis of latent social roles--II. Administrative Science Quarterly, 2 (4), 444-480] on organisational roles to develop a discussion of professional awareness; a pivotal notion is also the interactionist one of the hospital as a 'negotiated order'. Drawing for illustrative purposes on the Norwegian experience (that is, reviewing research on hospital information systems in Norway), we contend that enhanced awareness of the hospital itself as a social system may be a precondition of cost-effective hospital information and communication technologies.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Attitude to Computers , Awareness , Diffusion of Innovation , Hospital Information Systems/organization & administration , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/organization & administration , Computer Security , Efficiency, Organizational , Hospital Information Systems/standards , Hospital Information Systems/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Medical Informatics , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/standards , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/statistics & numerical data , Models, Theoretical , Norway , Organizational Case Studies , Organizational Culture , Social Sciences , Sociology, Medical , Systems Integration
17.
Soc Sci Med ; 66(8): 1848-62, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18295948

ABSTRACT

This paper addresses the near global attribution of stigma and deviance to female sex workers, and the salience of this attribution for health interventions in HIV/AIDS. A conceptual frame is developed as a guide to comparative sociological study in this area, and the importance of explanation at the level of social structure emphasized. After a general review of the empirical literature, more sustained attention is paid to specific aspects of female sex work in three contexts or figurations, the cities of London, Bangkok and Kolkarta. It is argued that norms of shame and blame and the labelling process with which they are bound up always arise within a structure nexus. We emphasis, in particular, the figuration-specific tensions between the global and the local, system and lifeworld and, the relationship between structure, agency and culture. The article concludes with a discussion of attempts to empower female sex workers and with a series of five orienting themes comprising a research programme for the future.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , HIV Infections/epidemiology , Sex Work , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Female , Global Health , HIV Infections/etiology , HIV Infections/transmission , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , India/epidemiology , London/epidemiology , Power, Psychological , Prejudice , Risk-Taking , Sex Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Sex Work/psychology , Shame , Stereotyping , Thailand/epidemiology
18.
Sociol Health Illn ; 29(3): 412-29, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17470219

ABSTRACT

Acupuncture and other types of 'complementary and alternative medicine' (CAM) are proving increasingly popular in the UK. As attempts to incorporate acupuncture into allopathic medicine have grown in number, the issue of assessing its effectiveness in ways consistent with the concept of evidence-based medicine has become more urgent. The nature, relevance and applicability of such assessments remain controversial however. This paper reports a qualitative study of acupuncturists' own perceptions of evidence and evidence-based medicine in relation to their therapeutic interventions. The material is presented in two main sections: explaining how acupuncture works, and resisting evidence-based medicine. The interviews reveal a great deal of scepticism and ambivalence and a deep questioning of the salience of conventional (biomedical) modes of evaluation of interventions.


Subject(s)
Acupuncture Therapy/standards , Acupuncture , Attitude of Health Personnel , Evidence-Based Medicine , Quality of Health Care , Sociology, Medical , Adult , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , London , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , United Kingdom
20.
Psychol Health Med ; 11(3): 288-95, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17130066

ABSTRACT

There is a long and cross-disciplinary tradition of analysing chronic and disabling illness in terms of relations of stigma. The present paper offers a sociological approach which emphasizes: (a) the causal importance of social structures for grasping stigma relations; (b) the importance of understanding stigma relations in the context of wider societal change; and (c) the ways in which relations of stigma typically interact with other relations, such as those of class and command. It is suggested that consideration of specific and often condition-related strategies to reduce stigma might profitably be set in such a context.


Subject(s)
Disabled Persons , Prejudice , Social Conditions , Sociology , Chronic Disease , Health Status , Humans , Models, Theoretical
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