Suppr超能文献

“我们不是病人。我们是囚犯”:监禁期间和监禁后,老年黑人女性的衰老、健康和疾病体验。

"We're Not Patients. We're Inmates": Older Black Women's Experience of Aging, Health, and Illness During and After Incarceration.

机构信息

Institute for Health and Aging, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.

出版信息

Gerontologist. 2024 Apr 1;64(4). doi: 10.1093/geront/gnad114.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES

The incarcerated population is growing older and by the year 2030, more than one third of people incarcerated in the United States will be over the age of 55. This population shift will have a profound impact on correctional health care systems as older incarcerated people often have multiple chronic illnesses and correctional institutions were not designed with aging and disability in mind. Black women experience greater burdens of comorbid conditions and are disproportionately represented among incarcerated women.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS

We utilized Black Feminist Epistemological Methodology to explore the intersection of aging, chronic illness, and mass incarceration via in-depth interviews with 13 formerly incarcerated older Black women.

RESULTS

First, participants described needing to prove themselves to be trustworthy prior to becoming ill in order to be believed and granted access to care when they report symptoms. Next, participants report being treated, not as patients, but as "inmates." The punitive nature of prison health care disrupted the patient-provider relationship and complicated the ability of patients to maintain autonomy in health care interactions. Finally, I describe how carceral health extends beyond the walls of both the clinic and the institution.

DISCUSSION AND IMPLICATIONS

For older Black women, medical care and decision making inside prisons occur within a punitive context, which presents unique barriers when seeking care. Their experiences of health and illness while incarcerated may continue to influence if and how they seek care as they age in the community and thus must be interrogated when discussing aging in the Black community.

摘要

背景与目的

被监禁人口日益老龄化,到 2030 年,美国被监禁人口中超过三分之一的人年龄将超过 55 岁。这种人口结构的转变将对矫正医疗保健系统产生深远影响,因为老年被监禁者通常患有多种慢性疾病,而矫正机构的设计并未考虑到老龄化和残疾问题。黑人女性患有更多的合并症,而且在被监禁的女性中所占比例不成比例。

研究设计与方法

我们利用黑人女性主义认识论方法,通过对 13 名以前被监禁的老年黑人女性进行深入访谈,探讨老龄化、慢性疾病和大规模监禁的交叉问题。

结果

首先,参与者描述了在生病之前需要证明自己值得信赖,以便在报告症状时获得信任并获得医疗保健。其次,参与者报告说,他们被当作“囚犯”对待,而不是病人。监狱医疗保健的惩罚性质破坏了医患关系,使患者在医疗保健互动中保持自主权变得复杂。最后,我描述了监禁健康如何超越诊所和机构的围墙。

讨论与意义

对于老年黑人女性来说,监狱内的医疗保健和决策是在惩罚性的环境中进行的,这在寻求医疗保健时带来了独特的障碍。她们在监禁期间的健康和疾病经历可能会继续影响她们在社区中衰老时是否寻求医疗保健以及如何寻求医疗保健,因此在讨论黑人社区中的老龄化问题时必须对其进行审查。

相似文献

3
The Links Between Disability, Incarceration, And Social Exclusion.残疾、监禁与社会排斥之间的联系。
Health Aff (Millwood). 2022 Oct;41(10):1460-1469. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2022.00495.
10
The Value of Screening for a History of Incarceration in the Palliative Care Setting.在姑息治疗环境中筛查监禁史的价值。
Am J Hosp Palliat Care. 2024 May;41(5):468-470. doi: 10.1177/10499091231186400. Epub 2023 Jun 26.

本文引用的文献

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验