Malone R E
University of California, San Francisco 94143-0602, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 1995 Feb;40(4):469-77. doi: 10.1016/0277-9536(94)e0116-a.
A relatively small subgroup of emergency department (ED) patients is responsible for a disproportionate amount of ED visits and costs. This subgroup, the heavy users of ED services, is identified as a medically and socially vulnerable population. Heavy users of ED services are identified as a 'problem' in the United States that opens a 'window' on the wider social issues critical to consensus on health care reform. The problem is nested within a complex of larger, interdependent problems including access to care, lack of primary/preventive services, absent or inadequate social services, and fragmented service delivery. This article uses the literature on heavy users of ED services to argue that social constructions of the problem and articulation of solutions by different key players in health care reform are based on divergent and often conflicting premises.
急诊科(ED)患者中相对较小的一个亚组占用了不成比例的急诊就诊量和费用。这个亚组,即急诊服务的频繁使用者,被认定为医疗和社会方面的弱势群体。在美国,急诊服务的频繁使用者被视为一个“问题”,它为达成医疗保健改革共识至关重要的更广泛社会问题打开了一扇“窗口”。该问题嵌套在一系列更大的、相互依存的问题之中,包括获得医疗服务的机会、缺乏初级/预防服务、社会服务缺失或不足以及服务提供碎片化。本文利用关于急诊服务频繁使用者的文献来论证,医疗保健改革中不同关键参与者对该问题的社会建构和解决方案的阐述基于不同且往往相互冲突的前提。