Applied Medical Anthropology and Structurally Informed Emergency Care in the Evolving Context of COVID-19

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Heather Henderson, Jason Wilson, Bernice McCoy
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Abstract

This article describes the integration of medical anthropologists as direct members of health care teams within a large, urban teaching hospital as a means to address the role of structural inequality in unequal health care delivery within the context of COVID-19. The pandemic starkly underlined the role structural forces such as food insecurity, housing instability, and unequal access to health insurance play among vulnerable populations that seek health care, particularly within the emergency department (ED). There is a critical need to recognize the reality that disease acquisition is a cultural process. This is a significant limitation of the biomedical model, which often considers disease as a separate entity from the social contexts in which disease is found. Further, a focus on patient-centered care can open the door for critical, clinically applied, medical anthropologists to team with physicians, merging ethnographic methods with health data and the socially constructed realities of patients’ lived experience to build new pathways of care. These pathways may better prepare physicians and health care systems to respond to novel threats like COVID-19, which are rooted in pathophysiological origins but have outcome distributions driven by cultural and structural determinants. To this end, we propose a reconfiguration of dominant biomedical ideologies around disease acquisition and spread by examining our work since 2018, which sees anthropologists embedded both locally and systematically in the creation of anthropologically informed treatment pathways for socially complex disease states like HIV, Hepatitis C, and Opioid Use Disorder (Henderson 2018). Understanding how these socially complex diseases concentrate and interact in populations is a potential opportunity to model solutions for other widespread and complex health care crises, including COVID-19.
新型冠状病毒病疫情演变背景下的应用医学人类学与结构知情急救
本文描述了将医学人类学家作为大型城市教学医院医疗保健团队的直接成员进行整合,以此作为解决COVID-19背景下结构性不平等在不平等医疗保健提供中的作用的一种手段。这场大流行鲜明地凸显了粮食不安全、住房不稳定和获得医疗保险机会不平等等结构性力量在寻求医疗保健的弱势群体中所起的作用,特别是在急诊科。迫切需要认识到,疾病的获得是一个文化过程。这是生物医学模型的一个重大局限性,生物医学模型通常将疾病视为与发现疾病的社会背景分开的实体。此外,关注以患者为中心的护理可以为批判性的临床应用医学人类学家与医生合作打开大门,将人种学方法与健康数据和患者生活经验的社会建构现实相结合,以建立新的护理途径。这些途径可以使医生和卫生保健系统更好地应对COVID-19等新型威胁,这些威胁植根于病理生理起源,但其结果分布受文化和结构决定因素的驱动。为此,我们通过检查我们自2018年以来的工作,提出了围绕疾病获取和传播的主流生物医学意识形态的重新配置,其中人类学家在本地和系统地为艾滋病毒、丙型肝炎和阿片类药物使用障碍等社会复杂疾病状态创建人类学信息治疗途径(Henderson 2018)。了解这些复杂的社会疾病如何在人群中集中并相互作用,是为包括COVID-19在内的其他广泛而复杂的卫生保健危机提供解决方案的潜在机会。
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来源期刊
Human Organization
Human Organization Multiple-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
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