McDonald Ruth
National Primary Care Research and Development Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Sociol Health Illn. 2009 Jul;31(5):659-72. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2009.01165.x. Epub 2009 Apr 9.
Drawing on interviews with English primary care doctors (GPs), this paper examines GP responses to reforms intended to introduce a market in primary health care. GPs' reactions are conceptualised in terms of a GP habitus, which takes for granted the superiority of 'public' providers (i.e. GP partnerships) in the provision of care. GPs are actively involved in the defence of the public sphere, which is neither a neo-liberal minimalist market state, nor a wholly altruistic state, responding to consumers' wants. The public sphere they defend is one in which boundaries are drawn about entitlements and GPs are actively engaged in defining and policing these boundaries. The GP habitus can be seen as shaping responses in ways which serve GP interests. In the context of struggles involving various social actors (e.g. private providers, third-party payers, patients) with different stakes in the field of general medical practice; this public service orientation may enable GPs to reap cultural capital. At the same time, the habitus constrains action in a way which limits resistance to reforms threatening GPs' interests, with GPs responding by coping, rather than downing tools or engaging in active confrontation.
本文通过对英国基层医疗医生(全科医生)的访谈,考察了全科医生对旨在引入基层医疗市场的改革的反应。全科医生的反应依据一种全科医生惯习来概念化,这种惯习认为“公立”提供者(即全科医生合伙制)在提供医疗服务方面具有优越性。全科医生积极参与公共领域的捍卫,这个公共领域既不是新自由主义的极简主义市场国家,也不是完全利他的、回应消费者需求的国家。他们所捍卫的公共领域是一个对权利划定界限的领域,全科医生积极参与界定和维护这些界限。全科医生惯习可以被视为以服务全科医生利益的方式塑造反应。在涉及普通医疗实践领域中具有不同利害关系的各种社会行为者(如私立提供者、第三方支付者、患者)的斗争背景下,这种公共服务导向可能使全科医生获得文化资本。与此同时,惯习以一种限制对威胁全科医生利益的改革进行抵制的方式约束行动,全科医生通过应对而非罢工或积极对抗来做出回应。