Literature DB >> 21349181

The creation of the health consumer: challenges on health sector regulation after managed care era.

Celia Iriart1, Tulio Franco, Emerson E Merhy.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We utilized our previous studies analyzing the reforms affecting the health sector developed in the 1990s by financial groups to frame the strategies implemented by the pharmaceutical industry to regain market positions and to understand the challenges that regulatory agencies are confronting.
METHODS: We followed an analytical approach for analyzing the process generated by the disputes between the financial groups and the pharmaceutical corporations and the challenges created to governmental regulation. We analyzed primary and secondary sources using situational and discourse analyses. We introduced the concepts of biomedicalization and biopedagogy, which allowed us to analyze how medicalization was radicalized.
RESULTS: In the 1990s, structural adjustment policies facilitated health reforms that allowed the entrance of multinational financial capital into publicly-financed and employer-based insurance. This model operated in contraposition to the interests of the medical industrial complex, which since the middle of the 1990s had developed silent reforms to regain authority in defining the health-ill-care model. These silent reforms radicalized the medicalization. Some reforms took place through deregulatory processes, such as allowing direct-to-consumer advertisements of prescription drugs in the United States. In other countries different strategies were facilitated by the lack of regulation of other media such as the internet. The pharmaceutical industry also has had a role in changing disease definitions, rebranding others, creating new ones, and pressuring for approval of treatments to be paid by public, employer, and private plans. In recent years in Brazil there has been a substantial increase in the number of judicial claims demanding that public administrations pay for new treatments.
CONCLUSIONS: We found that the dispute for the hegemony of the health sector between financial and pharmaceutical companies has deeply transformed the sector. Patients converted into consumers are exposed to the biomedicalization of their lives helped by the biopedagogies, which using subtle mechanisms present discourses as if they are objective and created to empower consumers. The analysis of judicialization of health policies in Brazil could help to understand the complexity of the problem and to develop democratic mechanisms to improve the regulation of the health sector.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 21349181      PMCID: PMC3055814          DOI: 10.1186/1744-8603-7-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Global Health        ISSN: 1744-8603            Impact factor:   4.185


  12 in total

1.  The exportation of managed care to Latin America.

Authors:  K Stocker; H Waitzkin; C Iriart
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1999-04-08       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  The discovery of hyperkinesis: notes on the medicalization of deviant behavior.

Authors:  Peter Conrad
Journal:  Soc Probl       Date:  1975-10

3.  [Importing medicines with quality assurance].

Authors: 
Journal:  Rev Saude Publica       Date:  2004-04-26       Impact factor: 2.106

4.  [Situation of lawsuits concerning the access to medical products by the Health Department of Santa Catarina State, Brazil, during the years 2003 and 2004].

Authors:  Januária Ramos Pereira; Rosana Isabel dos Santos; José Miguel do Nascimento Junior; Eloir Paulo Schenkel
Journal:  Cien Saude Colet       Date:  2010-11

5.  Argentina: no lesson learned.

Authors:  Celia Iriart; Howard Waitzkin
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 1.663

6.  ['Judicialization' of public health policy for distribution of medicines].

Authors:  Ana Luiza Chieffi; Rita Barradas Barata
Journal:  Cad Saude Publica       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 1.632

7.  [Financial capital versus medical-industrial complex: challenges for the regulatory agencies].

Authors:  Celia Iriart
Journal:  Cien Saude Colet       Date:  2008 Sep-Oct

8.  What are the roles and responsibilities of the media in disseminating health information?

Authors:  Gary Schwitzer; Ganapati Mudur; David Henry; Amanda Wilson; Merrill Goozner; Maria Simbra; Melissa Sweet; Katherine A Baverstock
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2005-07-26       Impact factor: 11.069

9.  Combating disease mongering: daunting but nonetheless essential.

Authors:  Iona Heath
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2006-04-11       Impact factor: 11.069

10.  Pharmaceutical marketing and the invention of the medical consumer.

Authors:  Kalman Applbaum
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2006-04-11       Impact factor: 11.069

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  3 in total

1.  Understanding health systems, health economies and globalization: the need for social science perspectives.

Authors:  Susan F Murray; Ramila Bisht; Rama Baru; Emma Pitchforth
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2012-08-31       Impact factor: 4.185

2.  The Challenge of Cardiovascular Diseases and Diabetes to Public Health: A Study Based on Qualitative Systemic Approach.

Authors:  Marilia Sá Carvalho; Claudia Medina Coeli; Dóra Chor; Rejane Sobrino Pinheiro; Maria de Jesus Mendes da Fonseca; Luiz Carlos de Sá Carvalho
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-07-14       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  The Judicialization of Health and the Quest for State Accountability: Evidence from 1,262 Lawsuits for Access to Medicines in Southern Brazil.

Authors:  João Biehl; Mariana P Socal; Joseph J Amon
Journal:  Health Hum Rights       Date:  2016-06
  3 in total

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