Dutta Sayak, Samant Mayuri, Santosh Sanjana, Calnan Michael, Kane Sumit
Centre for Health Policy & Systems, Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics, BMCC Road, Pune, India.
Nossal Institute for Global Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Australia.
SSM Health Syst. 2025 Jun;4:100070. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmhs.2025.100070.
Incidents of violence against doctors are increasing across the world. Beyond concerns of physical security, this raises questions about the state of the social contract between medicine and society. We analyse the situation in India as a case using the 'assumptive worlds' framework to understand how doctors are coping with the situation and situating themselves within a rapidly changing health system and society. Interviews were conducted with forty-two purposively selected medical and non-medical (patients, journalists, lawyers, police) participants over eighteen months. We found that professional autonomy, respect for doctors, and trust in doctors and their altruism - key aspects of doctors' assumptive worlds - are constantly challenged by assertive patients, an antagonistic society, and an apathetic administrative and regulatory system. The rise in violent attacks is creating a deep sense of being unfairly targeted and unjustly treated. To reconcile themselves with these developments, doctors in India are having to, often with anguish, reimagine their assumptive worlds and reshape their identities. Doctors are, however, unwittingly adopting a siege mentality. We conclude that the Indian medical profession's response to these societal developments needs to instead be critical, and self-reflective, and that change must begin from within the medical profession.
全球范围内,针对医生的暴力事件不断增加。除了对人身安全的担忧,这还引发了关于医学与社会之间社会契约状况的问题。我们以印度的情况为例,运用“假设世界”框架进行分析,以了解医生如何应对这种情况,以及他们在快速变化的卫生系统和社会中如何定位自己。在18个月的时间里,我们对42名经过有目的挑选的医学和非医学(患者、记者、律师、警察)参与者进行了访谈。我们发现,医生假设世界的关键方面——职业自主权、对医生的尊重、对医生及其利他主义的信任——不断受到坚定的患者、敌对的社会以及冷漠的行政和监管系统的挑战。暴力袭击事件的增加让医生深感自己成为了不公平的目标且受到了不公正的对待。为了与这些发展情况达成和解,印度的医生常常痛苦地不得不重新构想他们的假设世界,并重塑自己的身份。然而,医生们不知不觉地采取了一种围城心态。我们得出结论,印度医学界对这些社会发展情况的应对需要批判性的、自我反思性的,而且变革必须从医学界内部开始。