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Seeking recognition through carceral health care bureaucracy: Analysis of medical care request forms in a County Jail

Emmeline Friedman, Eliza Burr and Carolyn Sufrin

Social Science & Medicine, 2021, vol. 291, issue C

Abstract: People experiencing incarceration in the U.S. have a constitutional right to have access to health care. Yet actualizing this right is constrained by the everyday reality of an environment designed to punish and limit autonomy. The principal means for accessing health care in a carceral facility is for an individual to submit a written request, which then gets handled through the jail's bureaucratic processes. In this paper, we provide quantitative and qualitative analyses of the content and circulation of one month of these written requests—called “medical care request” (MCR) forms—at an urban, U.S. jail to understand the meanings of health and health care for a group of individuals who are systematically marginalized. In one month in 2012 at this jail housing 140 individuals, 527 MCRs were submitted. We coded requests into categories: medications, amelioration of living conditions, specific symptoms, and requests for a specific health care service. The most common request was for pain medication. In qualitative analysis, four key themes emerged: reliance on the clinic to mediate the needs of daily life; deservingness of health care; hyperawareness of bodily and psychic discomfort; and temporal techniques for asserting control over individuals' time and bodies in jail. We show that MCRs are a key mechanism through which incarcerated individuals seek recognition of their physical and psychic suffering, and more broadly, of their very existences. When considered in the broader context of controlling carceral regimes and health inequities that characterize U.S. society, MCRs become dynamic terrain through which jail health care providers and incarcerated people negotiate the tensions of deservingness of care.

Keywords: Incarceration; Jail health care; Correctional health care; Health related deservingness; Medical requests in jail (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)

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DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114485

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