Kano Miria, Willging Cathleen E, Rylko-Bauer Barbara
Behavioral Health Research Center of the Southwest Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, USA.
Med Anthropol Q. 2009 Sep;23(3):277-97. doi: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2009.01060.x.
In 2005, New Mexico implemented a unique reform in managed behavioral health services that seeks to ensure delivery of consumer-driven, recovery-oriented care to low-income individuals. Distinguishing features of the reform are the Local Collaboratives (LCs), regionally based community organizations designed by state government to represent behavioral health concerns of New Mexico's diverse cultural populations. We examine community response to the LCs, focusing on two broad sets of themes derived from 18 months of ethnographic fieldwork. The first set--structure and function--encompasses several issues: predominance of provider versus consumer voice; insufficient resources to support internal operations; imposition of state administrative demands; and perceived lack of state response to LC efforts. The second set--participation and collaboration--reveals how problems of information flow and other logistical factors impact involvement in LCs and how the construction of "community" introduced under this initiative exacerbates tensions across localities with varied histories and populations.
2005年,新墨西哥州对管理式行为健康服务实施了一项独特的改革,旨在确保为低收入人群提供以消费者为导向、注重康复的护理。改革的显著特点是地方协作组织(LCs),这是由州政府设立的区域性社区组织,旨在代表新墨西哥州多元文化人群的行为健康问题。我们研究了社区对地方协作组织的反应,重点关注从18个月的人种志实地调查中得出的两大类主题。第一类——结构与功能——包括几个问题:提供者与消费者声音的主导地位;支持内部运作的资源不足;州行政要求的强加;以及认为州政府对地方协作组织的努力缺乏回应。第二类——参与与协作——揭示了信息流问题和其他后勤因素如何影响对地方协作组织的参与,以及该倡议下引入的“社区”构建如何加剧不同历史和人口地区之间的紧张关系。