Department of Public Health, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2010;51 Suppl:S107-19. doi: 10.1177/0022146510383504.
The rising costs and inconsistent quality of health care in the United States have raised significant questions among professionals, policy makers, and the public about the way health services are being delivered. For the past 50 years, medical sociologists have made significant contributions in improving our understanding of the nature and impact of the organizations that constitute our health care system. In this article, we discuss three central findings in the sociology of health services: (1) health services in the U.S. are unequally distributed, contributing to health inequalities across status groups; (2) social institutions reproduce health care inequalities by constraining and enabling the actions of health service organizations, health care providers, and consumers; and (3) the structure and dynamics of health care organizations shape the quality, effectiveness, and outcomes of health services for different groups and communities. We conclude with a discussion of the policy implications of these findings for future health care reform efforts.
美国医疗保健成本不断上升和质量参差不齐,引起了专业人士、政策制定者和公众对医疗服务提供方式的严重质疑。在过去的 50 年中,医学社会学家在增进我们对构成医疗保健系统的组织的性质和影响的理解方面做出了重大贡献。在本文中,我们讨论了卫生服务社会学的三个核心发现:(1)美国的医疗服务分布不均,导致不同社会地位群体之间存在健康不平等;(2)社会机构通过限制和促进卫生服务组织、医疗保健提供者和消费者的行动,再现医疗保健不平等;(3)医疗保健组织的结构和动态塑造了不同群体和社区的医疗服务的质量、效果和结果。最后,我们讨论了这些发现对未来医疗保健改革努力的政策影响。