Literature DB >> 24947552

Solidarity by demand? Exit and voice in international medical travel - the case of Indonesia.

Meghann Ormond1.   

Abstract

Globally, more patients are intentionally travelling abroad as consumers for medical care. However, while scholars have begun to examine international medical travel's (IMT) impacts on the people and places that receive medical travellers, study of its impacts on medical travellers' home contexts has been negligible and largely speculative. While proponents praise IMT's potential to make home health systems more responsive to the needs of market-savvy healthcare consumers, critics identify it as a way to further de-politicise the satisfaction of healthcare needs. This article draws from work on political consumerism, health advocacy and social movements to argue for a reframing of IMT not as a 'one-off' statement about or an event external to struggles over access, rights and recognition within medical travellers' home health systems but rather as one of a range of critical forms of on-going engagement embedded within these struggles. To do this, the limited extant empirical work addressing domestic impacts of IMT is reviewed and a case study of Indonesian medical travel to Malaysia is presented. The case study material draws from 85 interviews undertaken in 2007-08 and 2012 with Indonesian and Malaysian respondents involved in IMT as care recipients, formal and informal care-providers, intermediaries, promoters and policy-makers. Evidence from the review and case study suggests that IMT may effect political and social change within medical travellers' home contexts at micro and macro levels by altering the perspectives, habits, expectations and accountability of, and complicity among, medical travellers, their families, communities, formal and informal intermediaries, and medical providers both within and beyond the container of the nation-state. Impacts are conditioned by the ideological foundations underpinning home political and social systems, the status of a medical traveller's ailment or therapy, and the existence of organised support for recognition and management of these in the home context.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Citizenship; Health social movements; Healthcare advocacy; Indonesia; Malaysia; Medical tourism; Political consumerism; Resistance

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24947552     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.06.007

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


  4 in total

Review 1.  Developing an informational tool for ethical engagement in medical tourism.

Authors:  Krystyna Adams; Jeremy Snyder; Valorie A Crooks; Rory Johnston
Journal:  Philos Ethics Humanit Med       Date:  2017-08-25       Impact factor: 2.464

2.  Understanding medical travel from a source country perspective: a cross sectional study of the experiences of medical travelers from the Maldives.

Authors:  Mariyam Suzana; Helen Walls; Richard Smith; Johanna Hanefeld
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2018-06-19       Impact factor: 4.185

3.  Intra-Regional Medical Tourism Demand in Malaysia: A Qualitative Study of Indonesian Medical Tourists' Rationale and Preferences.

Authors:  Nur Adilah Md Zain; John Connell; Mohd Salehuddin Mohd Zahari; Mohd Hafiz Hanafiah
Journal:  Malays J Med Sci       Date:  2022-04-21

Review 4.  A realist synthesis of cross-border patient movement from low and middle income countries to similar or higher income countries.

Authors:  Jo Durham; Sarah J Blondell
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2017-08-29       Impact factor: 4.185

  4 in total

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