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Racism, Resistance, Resilience: Chronically Ill African American Women's Experiences Navigating a Changing Healthcare System

机译:种族主义,抵抗力,复原力:长期病情的非洲裔美国妇女在不断变化的医疗保健系统中的经历

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摘要

This medical anthropology dissertation is an intersectional study of the illness experiences of African-American women living with the chronic autoimmune syndrome systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), commonly known as lupus. Research was conducted in Memphis, Tennessee from 2013 to 2015, with the aim of examining the healthcare resources available to working poor and working class women using public sector healthcare programs to meet their primary care needs. This project focuses on resources available through Tennessee's privatized public sector healthcare system, TennCare, during the first phases of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). A critical medical anthropological analysis is used to examine chronically ill women's survival strategies regarding their daily health and well-being. The objectives of this research were to: 1) understand what factors contribute to poor women's ability to access healthcare resources, 2) explore how shared illness experiences act as a form of community building, and 3) document how communities of color use illness narratives as a way to address institutionalized racism in the United States. The research areas included: the limits of biomedical objectivity; diagnostic timeline in relation to selfreported medical history; effects of the relationship between socio-economic circumstance and access to consistent healthcare resources, including primary and acute care, as well as access to pharmaceutical interventions; and the role of non-medical support networks, including personal support networks, illness specific support groups, and faith based organizations. Qualitative methods were used to collect data. Methods included: participant observation in support groups, personal homes, and faith based organizations, semi-structured group interviews, and open-ended individual interviews. Fifty-one women living with clinically diagnosed lupus or undiagnosed lupus-like symptoms participated in individual interviews. Additionally twenty-one healthcare workers, including social workers, Medicaid caseworkers, and clinic support staff were interviewed in order to contextualize current state and local health programs and proposed changes to federal and state healthcare policy.
机译:该医学人类学学位论文是对患有慢性自身免疫综合征系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)(通常称为狼疮)的非洲裔美国妇女疾病经历的一项交叉研究。该研究于2013年至2015年在田纳西州的孟菲斯进行,目的是研究使用公共部门医疗保健计划满足其初级保健需求的在职贫穷和上班族妇女的医疗资源。该项目的重点是在《患者保护和负担得起的医疗法案》(ACA)的第一阶段中,田纳西州私有化的公共部门医疗保健系统TennCare提供的资源。一项重要的医学人类学分析用于检查慢性病妇女的日常健康和福祉。这项研究的目的是:1)了解导致贫困妇女获得医疗资源的能力的因素,2)探索共有疾病的经历如何作为社区建设的一种形式,以及3)记录有色人种如何使用疾病叙述作为解决美国制度化种族主义的一种方式。研究领域包括:生物医学客观性的局限性;有关自我报告病史的诊断时间表;社会经济情况与获得一致的医疗资源(包括初级和急性护理)以及获得药物干预措施之间的关系的影响;以及非医疗支持网络的角色,包括个人支持网络,特定疾病支持小组和基于信仰的组织。定性方法用于收集数据。方法包括:在支持小组,个人住所和基于信仰的组织中进行参与者观察,半结构化小组访谈和不限成员名额的个人访谈。五十一名患有临床诊断为狼疮或未确诊为狼疮样症状的妇女参加了个人访谈。此外,还采访了21名医疗保健工作者,包括社会工作者,Medicaid个案工作者和诊所支持人员,以了解当前州和地方卫生计划的背景,并提出对联邦和州医疗政策的修改建议。

著录项

  • 作者

    New, Elizabeth.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Kentucky.;

  • 授予单位 University of Kentucky.;
  • 学科 Cultural anthropology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2018
  • 页码 255 p.
  • 总页数 255
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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