Barcelona Lab for Urban Environmental Justice and Sustainability, Institut de Ciencia i Tecnologia Ambientals (ICTA-UAB), Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Healthy Cities research group, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Institut Hospital del Mar d'Investigacions Mèdiques (IMIM), Barcelona, Spain.
Int J Equity Health. 2022 May 11;21(1):66. doi: 10.1186/s12939-022-01669-6.
Access to health care has traditionally been conceptualized as a function of patient socio-demographic characteristics (i.e., age, race/ethnicity, education, health insurance status, etc.) and/or the system itself (i.e., payment structures, facility locations, etc.). However, these frameworks typically do not take into account the broader, dynamic context in which individuals live and in which health care systems function.
The growth in market-driven health care in the U.S. alongside policies aimed at improving health care delivery and quality have spurred health system mergers and consolidations, a shift toward outpatient care, an increase in for-profit care, and the closure of less profitable facilities. These shifts in the type, location and delivery of health care services may provide increased access for some urban residents while excluding others, a phenomenon we term "health care gentrification." In this commentary, we frame access to health care in the United States in the context of neighborhood gentrification and a concurrent process of changes to the health care system itself.
We describe the concept of health care gentrification, and the complex ways in which both neighborhood gentrification and health care gentrification may lead to inequitable access to health care. We then present a framework for understanding health care gentrification as a function of dynamic and multi-level systems, and propose ways to build on existing models of health care access and social determinants of health to more effectively measure and address this phenomenon. Finally, we describe potential strategies applied researchers might investigate that could prevent or remediate the effects of health care gentrification in the United States.
传统上,医疗保健的可及性被视为患者社会人口统计学特征(即年龄、种族/民族、教育程度、医疗保险状况等)和/或系统本身(即支付结构、设施位置等)的功能。然而,这些框架通常没有考虑到个人生活和医疗保健系统运作的更广泛、动态的背景。
美国市场驱动型医疗保健的增长以及旨在改善医疗保健提供和质量的政策,刺激了医疗系统的合并和整合,向门诊护理的转变,营利性护理的增加,以及利润较低的设施的关闭。这些医疗服务类型、地点和提供方式的转变可能为一些城市居民提供了更多的机会,而将其他人排除在外,我们将这种现象称为“医疗保健高档化”。在这篇评论中,我们将美国的医疗保健可及性置于邻里高档化和医疗保健系统本身同时发生的变化的背景下进行讨论。
我们描述了医疗保健高档化的概念,以及邻里高档化和医疗保健高档化可能导致医疗保健获得不公平的复杂方式。然后,我们提出了一个理解医疗保健高档化的框架,作为动态和多层次系统的功能,并提出了利用现有的医疗保健获得和健康社会决定因素模型来更有效地衡量和解决这一现象的方法。最后,我们描述了应用研究人员可能会研究的潜在策略,这些策略可以预防或纠正美国医疗保健高档化的影响。