Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerpen, Belgium.
Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands.
Int J Equity Health. 2023 Mar 15;22(1):47. doi: 10.1186/s12939-023-01850-5.
Ensuring patient rights is an extension of applying human rights principles to health care. A critical examination of how the notion of patient rights is perceived and enacted by various actors through critical discourse analysis (CDA) can help understand the impediments to its realization in practice.
We studied the discourses and discursive practices on patient rights in subnational policies and in ten health facilities in southern Karnataka, India. We conducted interviews (78), focus group discussions (3) with care-seeking individuals, care-providers, health care administrators and public health officials. We also conducted participant observation in selected health facilities and examined subnational policy documents of Karnataka pertaining to patient rights. We analyzed the qualitative data for major and minor themes.
Patient rights discourses were not based upon human rights notions. In the context of neoliberalism, they were predominantly embedded within the logic of quality of care, economic, and consumerist perspectives. Relatively powerful actors such as care-providers and health facility administrators used a panoply of discursive strategies such as emphasizing alternate discourses and controlling discursive resources to suppress the promotion of patient rights among care-seeking individuals in health facilities. As a result, the capacity of care-seeking individuals to know and claim patient rights was restricted. With neoliberal health policies promoting austerity measures on public health care system and weak implementation of health care regulations, patient rights discourses remained subdued in health facilities in Karnataka, India.
The empirical findings on the local expression of patient rights in the discourses allowed for theoretical insights on the translation of conceptual understandings of patient rights to practice in the everyday lives of health system actors and care-seeking individuals. The CDA approach was helpful to identify the problematic aspects of discourses and discursive practices on patient rights where health facility administrators and care-providers wielded power to oppress care-seeking individuals. From the practical point of view, the study demonstrated the limitations of care-seeking individuals in the discursive realms to assert their agency as practitioners of (patient) rights in health facilities.
保障患者权利是将人权原则应用于医疗保健的延伸。通过批判性话语分析(CDA),批判性地审视各种行为者如何通过话语来理解和实施患者权利的概念,有助于了解其在实践中实现的障碍。
我们研究了印度卡纳塔克邦南部的次国家政策和 10 个卫生机构中关于患者权利的话语和话语实践。我们对寻求医疗的个人、医疗提供者、医疗保健管理人员和公共卫生官员进行了访谈(78 次)、焦点小组讨论(3 次)。我们还在选定的卫生机构进行了参与式观察,并审查了与患者权利有关的卡纳塔克邦的次国家政策文件。我们对主要和次要主题的定性数据进行了分析。
患者权利话语不是基于人权观念。在新自由主义背景下,它们主要嵌入在医疗质量、经济和消费者主义观点的逻辑中。相对强大的行为者,如医疗提供者和卫生机构管理人员,使用了一系列话语策略,如强调替代话语和控制话语资源,以抑制卫生机构中寻求医疗的个人对患者权利的宣传。因此,寻求医疗的个人了解和主张患者权利的能力受到限制。随着新自由主义卫生政策对公共卫生保健系统实行紧缩措施以及卫生保健法规执行不力,卡纳塔克邦的卫生机构中,患者权利话语仍然处于弱势地位。
关于患者权利在话语中的地方表达的实证发现,为将患者权利的概念理解转化为卫生系统行为者和寻求医疗的个人日常生活中的实践提供了理论见解。CDA 方法有助于确定患者权利话语和话语实践中的问题方面,在这些方面,卫生机构管理人员和医疗提供者行使权力压迫寻求医疗的个人。从实际角度来看,这项研究表明,寻求医疗的个人在话语领域中主张自己作为卫生机构中(患者)权利实践者的机构的局限性。