Literature DB >> 23944244

Medical returns as class transformation: situating migrants' medical returns within a framework of transnationalism.

Sarah B Horton1.   

Abstract

Because studies of migrants' 'medical returns' have been largely confined to the field of public health, such forms of return migration are rarely contextualized within the rich social scientific literature on transnational migration. Drawing on ethnographic interviews with Mexican migrants in an immigrant enclave in central California, I show that migrants' reasons for returning to their hometowns for care must be understood within the class disjunctures facilitated by migration. While migrants' Medicaid insurance confined them to public clinics and hospitals in the United States, their migrant dollars enabled them to visit private doctors and clinics in Mexico. Yet medical returns were not mere medical arbitrage, but also allowed migrants to access care that had previously been foreclosed to them as poor peasants in Mexico. Thus crossing the border enabled a dual class transformation, as Mexican migrants transitioned from Medicaid recipients to cash-paying patients, and from poor rural peasants to 'returning royalty.'

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23944244     DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2012.749875

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol        ISSN: 0145-9740


  2 in total

1.  Investigating patient perspectives on medical returns and buying medicines online in two communities in Melbourne, Australia: results from a qualitative study.

Authors:  Bianca Brijnath; Josefine Antoniades; Jon Adams
Journal:  Patient       Date:  2015-04       Impact factor: 3.883

2.  Migration status and healthcare seeking behaviours among the Chinese labor-force: a nationally representative study.

Authors:  Boli Peng; Hui Zhang; Lishuo Shi; Li Ling
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-11-14       Impact factor: 2.692

  2 in total

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