Literature DB >> 12719182

From home to hospital and back again: economic restructuring, end of life, and the gendered problems of place-switching health services.

Carolyn Cartier1.   

Abstract

Economic restructuring in the health services industry in the USA exemplifies general patterns of economic change propelled by neoliberalism, especially industry privatization, diminished social services, and dependence on "flexible" labor and management regimes. Combined with the widespread entry of women into the labor force, an aging population, and minimal assistance for high quality long-term care at the end of life, these economic and social conditions raise a set of difficult policy questions for health services planning. Set in these broad contexts, this paper situates access to and experience of health services in the home, the hospital, and nursing facility, to demonstrate how economic changes have relocated and redefined health services in ways that distinctively impact how people experience the places where they receive care. This place switching of health services externalizes costs of subacute and "daily life care" (the so-called custodial care) to the sphere of the individual, their family, and communities. The theoretical analysis uses current geographical and philosophical approaches to place and space, and considers the tensions between institutionally managed health care space, and the patient's experience of receiving health services in place. The place/space dilemma of health services provision is examined through several interrelated subjects: long-term care at the end of life, gendered characteristics of care giving, the limitations of Medicare and Medicaid, historical changes in hospital length of stay, the restructuring of nursing practices, and the "no-care zone". The analysis is based on examples of stroke and incontinence care to demonstrate the importance of considering place and space issues in health care planning.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12719182     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(02)00228-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  9 in total

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Review 5.  Quality indicators for community care for older people: A systematic review.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-01-09       Impact factor: 3.240

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7.  Family physicians' effort to stay in charge of the medical treatment when patients have home care by district nurses. A grounded theory study.

Authors:  Sonja Modin; Lena Törnkvist; Anna-Karin Furhoff; Ingrid Hylander
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8.  The medical care of patients with primary care home nursing is complex and influenced by non-medical factors: a comprehensive retrospective study from a suburban area in Sweden.

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9.  Liminality in Ontario's long-term care facilities: Private companions' care work in the space 'betwixt and between'.

Authors:  Tamara Daly; Pat Armstrong; Ruth Lowndes
Journal:  Compet Change       Date:  2016-06-01
  9 in total

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