Troubling complaint: Addressing hepatitis C‐related stigma and discrimination through complaint mechanisms

IF 2.7 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Emily Lenton, Dion Kagan, Kate Seear, Sean Mulcahy, Adrian Farrugia, kylie valentine, Michael Edwards, Danny Jeffcote
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Abstract

The need to grapple with hepatitis C‐related stigma and discrimination in Australian health‐care settings has been recognised in public policy, and work is underway to address it. But how likely are people to raise a complaint when they experience stigma or discrimination? And how effective and accessible are complaints mechanisms? Given complaint procedures are considered important parts of the delivery of safe and ethical health care, these are important questions that have yet to be substantially explored. Drawing on interviews with people with lived experience of hepatitis C (n = 30), this article considers how affected people feel about complaints processes and the act of complaining. Alongside these perspectives, we discuss complaint mechanisms, and the views of stakeholders who work with hepatitis C‐affected communities in policy, health, legal and advocacy roles (n = 30) on the institutional and cultural dynamics of complaint. We draw on Sara Ahmed’s Complaint! and Fraser et al.’s work on drug‐related stigma to analyse these concerns that have yet to be researched, and argue that the (unlikely) prospect of successful complaint is a key part of the network of forces that perpetuate stigma, discrimination and disadvantage among people who have (lived with) hepatitis C. Although people with lived experience are often powerful advocates and acutely aware of the deficiencies in the quality of their treatment, our interviews suggest that the obstacles they face to accessing health care are seen as commonplace, intractable and insurmountable; and, that mechanisms for addressing them—where they exist at all—treat complaints in narrowly individualising terms and expose complainants to dismissal. Following Ahmed, we call for a ‘troubling’ of complaints—responding to them not as individual problems but rather as collective, structural concerns, necessitating new approaches.
令人不安的投诉:通过投诉机制解决与丙型肝炎相关的羞辱和歧视问题
公共政策已经认识到有必要解决澳大利亚医疗机构中与丙型肝炎相关的耻辱化和歧视问题,并正在努力解决这一问题。但是,当人们遭遇污名化或歧视时,提出投诉的可能性有多大?投诉机制的有效性和可及性如何?鉴于投诉程序被认为是提供安全、合乎道德的医疗服务的重要组成部分,这些重要问题还有待深入探讨。本文通过对丙型肝炎患者(n = 30)的访谈,探讨了丙型肝炎患者对投诉程序和投诉行为的看法。除了这些观点之外,我们还讨论了投诉机制,以及在政策、健康、法律和宣传领域与丙型肝炎患者社区合作的利益相关者(30 人)对投诉的制度和文化动态的看法。我们借鉴萨拉-艾哈迈德(Sara Ahmed)的《投诉!》(Complaint! )和弗雷泽(Fraser)等人关于与毒品相关的污名化的研究成果,分析了这些尚待研究的问题,并认为(不太可能)成功投诉的前景是导致丙型肝炎患者(生活在丙型肝炎中)长期遭受污名化、歧视和不利地位的各种力量网络的关键部分。尽管丙型肝炎患者往往是强有力的代言人,并能敏锐地意识到他们的治疗质量存在缺陷,但我们的访谈表明,他们在获得医疗服务时所面临的障碍被视为司空见惯、难以克服且不可逾越的;而且,解决这些障碍的机制--如果存在的话--以狭隘的个人化术语处理投诉,并使投诉人面临被驳回的风险。继艾哈迈德之后,我们呼吁对投诉进行 "困扰"--不是将其作为个人问题,而是作为需要采取新方法的集体性、结构性问题来应对。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.90%
发文量
156
期刊介绍: Sociology of Health & Illness is an international journal which publishes sociological articles on all aspects of health, illness, medicine and health care. We welcome empirical and theoretical contributions in this field.
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