Literature DB >> 35095125

Managing the "hot spots": Health care, policing, and the governance of poverty in the US.

Mark D Fleming1, Janet K Shim2, Irene Yen3, Leslie Dubbin2, Ariana Thompson-Lastad2, Christoph Hanssmann4, Nancy J Burke3.   

Abstract

Health care systems in the United States are experimenting with a form of surveillance and intervention known as "hot spotting," which targets high-cost patients-the so-called "super-utilizers" of emergency departments-with intensive health and social services. Through a calculative deployment of resources to the costliest patients, health care hot spotting promises to simultaneously improve population health and decrease financial expenditures on health care for impoverished people. Through an ethnographic investigation of hot spotting's modes of distribution and its workings in the lives of patients and providers, we find that it targets the same individuals and neighborhoods as the police, who maintain longer-standing practices of hot spotting in zones of racialized urban poverty. This has led to a convergence of caring and punitive strategies of governance. The boundaries between them are shifting as a financialized logic of governance has come to dominate both health and criminal justice. [health care, chronic illness, governance, policing, poverty, United States].

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 35095125      PMCID: PMC8796821          DOI: 10.1111/amet.13032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Ethnol        ISSN: 0094-0496


  13 in total

Review 1.  Criminal (in)justice in the city and its associated health consequences.

Authors:  Cynthia Golembeski; Robert Fullilove
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2005-08-30       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Building a citywide, all-payer, hospital claims database to improve health care delivery in a low-income, urban community.

Authors:  Kennen Gross; Jeffrey C Brenner; Aaron Truchil; Ernest M Post; Amy Henderson Riley
Journal:  Popul Health Manag       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 2.459

3.  The hot spotters: can we lower medical costs by giving the neediest patients better care?

Authors:  Atul Gawande
Journal:  New Yorker       Date:  2011-01

4.  Caring for "Super-utilizers": Neoliberal Social Assistance in the Safety-net.

Authors:  Mark D Fleming; Janet K Shim; Irene Yen; Meredith Van Natta; Christoph Hanssmann; Nancy J Burke
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2018-10-29

5.  Pathologizing poverty: new forms of diagnosis, disability, and structural stigma under welfare reform.

Authors:  Helena Hansen; Philippe Bourgois; Ernest Drucker
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 4.634

6.  Geographies of medicalized welfare: Spatial analysis of supplemental security income in the U.S., 2000-2010.

Authors:  Sandy Wong
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2016-05-11       Impact factor: 4.634

7.  Cross-Sector Service Use Among High Health Care Utilizers In Minnesota After Medicaid Expansion.

Authors:  Katherine Diaz Vickery; Peter Bodurtha; Tyler N A Winkelman; Courtney Hougham; Ross Owen; Mark S Legler; Erik Erickson; Matthew M Davis
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  2018-01       Impact factor: 6.301

8.  "Housing Is Health Care": Treating Homelessness in Safety-net Hospitals.

Authors:  Christoph Hanssmann; Janet K Shim; Irene H Yen; Mark D Fleming; Meredith Van Natta; Ariana Thompson-Lastad; Maryani Palupy Rasidjan; Nancy J Burke
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2021-11-11

Review 9.  Structural competency: theorizing a new medical engagement with stigma and inequality.

Authors:  Jonathan M Metzl; Helena Hansen
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 4.634

10.  What is a Hotspot Anyway?

Authors:  Justin Lessler; Andrew S Azman; Heather S McKay; Sean M Moore
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 2.345

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