Family and Community Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Arizona.
Med Anthropol Q. 2019 Jun;33(2):191-206. doi: 10.1111/maq.12500. Epub 2019 Feb 12.
Public programs such as Medicaid offer highly circumscribed access to health care for low-income patients in the United States. This article describes the work of a variety of health care staff who manage specialized cancer care for publicly insured patients who have difficulty gaining or maintaining program eligibility or for uninsured and undocumented patients who are excluded from state programs. I highlight the moral distress that occurs when clinic employees become individually responsible for reconciling policies that limit patients' access to care. I conclude that responsibility for securing access to cancer care for structurally vulnerable patients frequently falls to safety net clinics and that patients' financial constraints are visible to particular types of staff, such as non-licensed health care staff and non-physician providers, who may experience moral distress disproportionately.
公共项目(如医疗补助)为美国低收入患者提供了高度受限的医疗保健机会。本文描述了各种医疗保健工作人员的工作,他们为有困难获得或维持项目资格的公共保险患者或被州项目排除在外的无保险和无证件的患者管理专门的癌症护理。我强调了当诊所员工个人负责协调限制患者获得医疗服务的政策时所产生的道德困境。我得出结论,为结构性弱势群体患者获得癌症护理的责任经常落在社会安全网诊所身上,并且患者的财务限制对特定类型的员工(如无执照的医疗保健人员和非医师提供者)可见,他们可能会不成比例地经历道德困境。