Centre for Health Policy, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa.
Global Health. 2014 May 15;10:35. doi: 10.1186/1744-8603-10-35.
As in many fragile and post-conflict countries, South Africa's social contract has formally changed from authoritarianism to democracy, yet access to services, including health care, remains inequitable and contested. We examine access barriers to quality health services and draw on social contract theory to explore ways in which a post-apartheid health care contract is narrated, practiced and negotiated by patients and providers. We consider implications for conceptualizing and promoting more inclusive, equitable health services in a post-conflict setting.
Using in-depth interviews with 45 patients and 67 providers, and field observations from twelve health facilities in one rural and two urban sub-districts, we explore access narratives of those seeking and delivering - negotiating - maternal health, tuberculosis and antiretroviral services in South Africa.
Although South Africa's right to access to health care is constitutionally guaranteed, in practice, a post-apartheid health care contract is not automatically or unconditionally inclusive. Access barriers, including poverty, an under-resourced, hierarchical health system, the nature of illness and treatment, and negative attitudes and actions, create conditions for insecure or adverse incorporation into this contract, or even exclusion (sometimes temporary) from health care services. Such barriers are exacerbated by differences in the expectations that patients and providers have of each other and the contract, leading to differing, potentially conflicting, identities of inclusion and exclusion: defaulting versus suffering patients, uncaring versus overstretched providers. Conversely, caring, respectful communication, individual acts of kindness, and institutional flexibility and leadership may mitigate key access barriers and limit threats to the contract, fostering more positive forms of inclusion and facilitating easier access to health care.
Building health in fragile and post-conflict societies requires the negotiation of a new social contract. Surfacing and engaging with differences in patient and provider expectations of this contract may contribute to more acceptable, accessible health care services. Additionally, the health system is well positioned to highlight and connect the political economy, institutions and social relationships that create and sustain identities of exclusion and inclusion - (re)politicise suffering - and co-ordinate and lead intersectoral action for overcoming affordability and availability barriers to inclusive and equitable health care services.
与许多脆弱和冲突后国家一样,南非的社会契约已正式从威权主义转变为民主,但包括医疗保健在内的服务获取仍然存在不平等和争议。我们研究了获得优质卫生服务的障碍,并借鉴社会契约理论,探讨了在后种族隔离时代,患者和提供者如何叙述、实践和协商医疗保健合同。我们考虑了在后冲突环境中为构思和促进更具包容性、公平性的卫生服务提供概念化的意义。
我们对 45 名患者和 67 名提供者进行了深入访谈,并在一个农村和两个城市分区的 12 个卫生机构进行了实地观察,探讨了在南非寻求和提供——协商——孕产妇保健、结核病和抗逆转录病毒服务的获取叙述。
尽管南非享有获得医疗保健的权利受到宪法保障,但实际上,后种族隔离时代的医疗保健合同并非自动或无条件地具有包容性。包括贫困、资源匮乏、等级制度的卫生系统、疾病和治疗的性质以及负面态度和行为在内的获取障碍,为不安全或不利地纳入该合同创造了条件,甚至导致(有时是暂时的)被排除在医疗保健服务之外。这些障碍因患者和提供者对彼此和合同的期望差异而加剧,导致包容和排斥的潜在冲突身份:默认的和受苦的患者、漠不关心的和不堪重负的提供者。相反,关怀、尊重的沟通、个人的善举以及机构的灵活性和领导力,可以减轻关键的获取障碍,并限制对合同的威胁,促进更积极的包容形式,更方便地获得医疗保健。
在脆弱和冲突后社会中建设健康需要协商新的社会契约。揭示并参与患者和提供者对该合同期望的差异,可能有助于提供更可接受、更方便的医疗保健服务。此外,卫生系统非常适合突出和联系创造和维持排斥和包容身份的政治经济、机构和社会关系——使痛苦政治化——并协调和领导部门间行动,以克服可负担性和可用性障碍,实现包容和公平的医疗保健服务。