Department of History, Archaeology/Art Studies, Philosophy and Ethics (HARP), Free University Brussels (VUB), Pleinlaan 2, 1050, Brussels, Belgium.
BMC Med Ethics. 2021 Nov 27;22(1):157. doi: 10.1186/s12910-021-00726-z.
Undocumented migrants experience multiple institutional and legal barriers when trying to access healthcare services. Due to such limitations, healthcare workers often experience ethical dilemmas when caring for undocumented migrants. This article aims to understand how individual healthcare workers who regularly take care of undocumented migrants deal with these dilemmas in practice. So far, the role of healthcare workers in this context has mainly been theorized through the lens of biopolitics, conceiving of healthcare workers as merely obedient instruments of humanitarian government or gatekeeping.
Based on semi-structured, in-depth interviews and ethnographic observations with healthcare workers in Belgium, we explore how they ascribe meaning, reflect upon and give shape to care practices in relation to undocumented migrants. We use Foucault's later work on care of the self to interpret the accounts given by the healthcare workers.
Healthcare workers in clinical roles exercise a certain degree of freedom in relation to the existing limitations to healthcare access of undocumented migrants. They developed techniques such as purposefully being inattentive to the undocumented status of the migrants. They also try to master their affective responses and transform their bodily attitude towards undocumented patients. They perform practical mental exercises to remind themselves of their role or position in the wider healthcare system and about their commitment to treat all patients equally. These techniques and exercises are inspired by colleagues who function as role models, inspiring them to relate in an ethical way to limitations in healthcare access. The developed care practices sometimes reproduce, sometimes transform the legal and institutional limitations to care for undocumented migrants.
The findings nuance the biopolitical analysis regarding the role of healthcare workers in healthcare delivery to undocumented migrants that has been dominant so far. Theoretically this article provides a reconceptualization of healthcare ethics as care of the self, an ethical practice that is somewhat independent of the traditional professional ethics. Trial Registration Medical ethics committee UZ Jette, Brussels, Belgium - Registration date: 18/05/2016 - Registration number: B.U.N. 143201628279.
非法移民在寻求医疗服务时会遇到多种制度和法律障碍。由于这些限制,医疗工作者在照顾非法移民时经常会遇到伦理困境。本文旨在了解经常照顾非法移民的医疗工作者如何在实践中应对这些困境。到目前为止,这种情况下医疗工作者的作用主要是通过生命政治理论来理解的,将医疗工作者仅仅视为人道主义政府或把关的顺从工具。
基于对比利时医疗工作者的半结构化深入访谈和民族志观察,我们探讨了他们如何赋予与非法移民有关的护理实践以意义、反思和塑造。我们使用福柯后期关于自我护理的著作来解释医疗工作者的说法。
在与非法移民获得医疗服务的现有限制相关的方面,临床角色的医疗工作者拥有一定程度的自由。他们开发了一些技术,例如故意不关注移民的无证身份。他们还试图控制自己的情感反应,并改变对无证患者的身体态度。他们进行实际的心理练习,以提醒自己在更广泛的医疗体系中的角色或地位,以及平等对待所有患者的承诺。这些技术和练习受到作为榜样的同事的启发,激励他们以符合道德的方式与医疗服务获取的法律和制度限制联系起来。所开发的护理实践有时会复制,有时会改变对无证移民护理的法律和制度限制。
这些发现细微地改变了迄今为止在向无证移民提供医疗服务方面占主导地位的医疗工作者的生命政治分析。从理论上讲,本文将医疗伦理重新概念化为自我护理,这是一种与传统职业道德有些独立的伦理实践。