Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA; Gender and Health Equity Project, Centre for Public Policy, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore, India.
Soc Sci Med. 2013 Nov;96:297-304. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.01.022. Epub 2013 Jan 29.
The dynamics of informal health markets in marginalised regions are relevant to policy discourse in India, but are poorly understood. We examine how informal health markets operate from the viewpoint of informal providers (those without any government-recognised medical degrees, otherwise known as RMPs) by drawing upon data from a household survey in 2002, a provider census in 2004 and ongoing field observations from a research site in Koppal district, Karnataka, India. We find that despite their illegality, RMPs depend on government and private providers for their training and referral networks. Buffeted by unregulated market pressures, RMPs are driven to provide allopathic commodities regardless of need, but can also be circumspect in their practice. Though motivated by profit, their socially embedded practice at community level at times undermines their ability to ensure payment of fees for their services. In addition, RMPs feel that communities can threaten them via violence or malicious rumours, leading them to seek political favour and social protection from village elites and elected representatives. RMPs operate within negotiated quid pro quo bargains that lead to tenuous reciprocity or fragile trust between them and the communities in which they practise. In the context of this 'unfree' market, some RMPs reported being more embedded in health systems, more responsive to communities and more vulnerable to unregulated market pressures than others. Understanding the heterogeneity, nuanced motivations and the embedded social relations that mark informal providers in the health systems, markets and communities they work in, is critical for health system reforms.
边缘化地区非正规医疗市场的动态与印度的政策讨论息息相关,但人们对此知之甚少。我们通过 2002 年的家庭调查、2004 年的供应商普查以及在印度卡纳塔克邦科帕尔地区的一个研究点进行的持续实地观察,从非正规提供者(即没有任何政府认可的医学学位的人,也被称为 RMPs)的角度来研究非正规医疗市场的运作方式。我们发现,尽管 RMPs 是非法的,但他们依赖政府和私人提供者来进行培训和转诊网络。在不受监管的市场压力下,RMPs 被迫提供对抗疗法的商品,无论是否有需求,但他们的实践也可以谨慎行事。尽管他们的动机是盈利,但他们在社区层面的社会嵌入实践有时会削弱他们确保服务费用得到支付的能力。此外,RMPs 感到社区可以通过暴力或恶意谣言来威胁他们,这导致他们寻求村庄精英和民选代表的政治支持和社会保护。RMPs 是在协商互惠的交易中运作的,这些交易导致他们与所在社区之间存在脆弱的互惠或脆弱的信任。在这种“不自由”的市场环境下,一些 RMPs 报告称,他们比其他 RMPs 更融入卫生系统,对社区更有响应性,也更容易受到不受监管的市场压力的影响。理解非正规提供者在其工作的卫生系统、市场和社区中的异质性、微妙的动机和嵌入的社会关系,对于卫生系统改革至关重要。