How Providers Can Acquire Structural and Intersectional Competencies.

Q3 Medicine
Edmund G Howe
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

AbstractThis piece describes two patients whose external circumstances caused harm to them. One had poor health insurance and lacked financial resources. The other lacked access to optimal healthcare because he was not a U.S. citizen. These external factors are commonly now referred to as "structural" and "intersectional" when they are single and multiple, respectively. This piece initially discusses how providers may better come to identify these external sources of harm to patients and then, hopefully, seek to alleviate them. It then discusses how providers, too, may cause external harm. They may make erroneous presuppositions about their patients based on their having certain impairments or symptoms, not know this, and as a result cause these patients iatrogenic harm. Means to avoid this, drawn largely from The Anti-Ableist Manifesto, a recently published, authoritative text on this subject written by Tiffany Yu, are outlined. Finally, the life of a young man, Mats Steen, is presented. His life most profoundly poses the questions of how we make inferences regarding people based only on how they look and what (little) we may know about them and how this may then affect how we can relate with them. Steen's life story is viewable on Netflix.

供应商如何获得结构和交叉能力。
摘要这篇文章描述了两个外部环境对他们造成伤害的病人。一个人的健康保险很差,缺乏财政资源。另一个人因为不是美国公民而无法获得最佳医疗保健。这些外部因素通常被称为“结构性”和“交叉性”,当它们是单一的和多重的。这篇文章首先讨论了提供者如何更好地识别这些对患者有害的外部来源,然后,希望,寻求减轻它们。然后讨论了提供者如何也可能造成外部伤害。他们可能会在不知情的情况下,根据患者的某些缺陷或症状,对患者做出错误的假设,从而导致这些患者的医源性伤害。避免这种情况的方法主要来自于最近出版的《反ableist宣言》(The Anti-Ableist Manifesto),这是由Tiffany Yu撰写的关于这一主题的权威文本。最后,讲述了一个名叫马茨·斯蒂恩的年轻人的生活。他的一生最深刻地提出了这样的问题:我们如何仅仅根据人们的外表和我们对他们的了解(很少)来推断他们,以及这将如何影响我们与他们的关系。斯蒂恩的人生故事可以在Netflix上观看。
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
Journal of Clinical Ethics
Journal of Clinical Ethics Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: The Journal of Clinical Ethics is written for and by physicians, nurses, attorneys, clergy, ethicists, and others whose decisions directly affect patients. More than 70 percent of the articles are authored or co-authored by physicians. JCE is a double-blinded, peer-reviewed journal indexed in PubMed, Current Contents/Social & Behavioral Sciences, the Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature, and other indexes.
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