Adams Crystal, Chatterjee Anwesa, Harder Brittany M, Mathias Liza Hayes
Department of Sociology, University of Miami, 5202 University Drive, Merrick Bldg, Room 120, Coral Gables, FL 33146, USA.
Department of Sociology, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK.
SSM Popul Health. 2018 Apr 12;4:350-357. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2018.04.003. eCollection 2018 Apr.
Trends toward pharmaceuticalization in Western countries have led to increased research and theorizing about the roles macro-level institutions, structures, and collective actors play in contributing to patients' reliance on prescription drugs. Relatively less work has focused on the degree to which patients resist pharmaceuticalization pressures, and even less research has explored the factors contributing to patients' resistance to pharmaceuticalization. Drawing on focus groups with patients who had been recently prescribed a prescription drug, this paper investigates how marginalization in the mainstream US society, as measured by acculturation and race, contributes to differences in patients' subjective experiences and responses to prescription drugs. We find that racial minorities report a greater skepticism of prescription drugs compared to whites and express that they turn to prescription drugs as a last resort. While highly acculturated participants rarely discuss alternatives to prescription drugs, less acculturated racial minorities indicate a preference for complementary and alternative remedies. We draw on the literatures on the pharmaceuticalization of society and the social nature of medicine to examine the role marginalization plays in patients' views of prescription drugs. Public health research conceives of racial minorities' lower rates of prescription drug usage compared to whites as primarily a problem of lack of access. Our results suggest another piece to the puzzle: minorities resist pharmaceuticalization pressures to express their cultural and racial identities.
西方国家的药物化趋势导致了对宏观层面的制度、结构和集体行为体在促使患者依赖处方药方面所起作用的研究和理论探讨不断增加。相对而言,较少有研究关注患者抵制药物化压力的程度,而对促成患者抵制药物化的因素进行探索的研究则更少。本文基于对近期开具了处方药的患者进行的焦点小组访谈,调查了以文化适应程度和种族来衡量的美国主流社会中的边缘化如何导致患者在主观体验和对处方药的反应上存在差异。我们发现,与白人相比,少数族裔对处方药表现出更大的怀疑态度,并表示他们将处方药作为最后的选择。虽然文化适应程度高的参与者很少讨论处方药的替代方法,但文化适应程度低的少数族裔则表示更喜欢补充和替代疗法。我们借鉴社会药物化和医学社会性质的文献,来审视边缘化在患者对处方药看法中所起的作用。公共卫生研究认为,与白人相比,少数族裔处方药使用率较低主要是一个缺乏获取途径的问题。我们的研究结果揭示了问题的另一个方面:少数族裔抵制药物化压力以表达他们的文化和种族身份。