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Migrant encounters in the clinic: Bureaucratic, biomedical, and community influences on patient interactions with front-line workers

Sarah A. Smith

Social Science & Medicine, 2016, vol. 150, issue C, 49-56

Abstract: Ethnographic research on the clinical encounter has focused almost exclusively on what happens in exam rooms—particularly patient-provider interactions—leaving much to be understood about other actors within the clinic. As part of a larger ethnographic study examining the impact of colonialism, transnational migration, discrimination, and gender relations on Chuukese migrant women's reproductive and sexual health outcomes in Guam, I conducted eight months of participant observation in three publicly funded health clinics, 24 interviews with health care workers, and 15 life-history interviews with Chuukese women between September 2012 and February 2014. Findings demonstrated differential treatment of Chuukese patients by front-line workers (FLWs), who engaged in “boundary work” with these patients. Further, care varied by clinic space and the actors in that space. This differential treatment and variation in care impacted Chuukese women's access to and experiences with health care in Guam. Utilizing the concept of “deservingness,” this analysis unpacks how FLWs, like Lipsky's “street-level bureaucrats,” are influenced by bureaucratic, biomedical, and community hierarchies, all contributing to differential patient treatment. This study concludes by calling for more integrated analyses of clinical environments which utilize Lipsky's concept to include community narratives of “deservingness” and incorporate the influence of clinic and community stratification.

Keywords: Guam; Front-line workers; Cultural competency; Health care spaces; Migrant health; Deservingness; Micronesia (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.12.022

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