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Suffering the System: Professional Dominance, the Uninsured, and the Healthcare Industry By: Stephanie Petty.

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Presentation on theme: "Suffering the System: Professional Dominance, the Uninsured, and the Healthcare Industry By: Stephanie Petty."— Presentation transcript:

1 Suffering the System: Professional Dominance, the Uninsured, and the Healthcare Industry By: Stephanie Petty

2 Introduction Working class: Among the poorest classes in most social class systems. Professional dominance: Performing a role that is in high demand while making a relatively high-self profit for the services performed. “The United States healthcare system is the third leading cause of death, after heart disease cancer.” Starfield (2000:483) 40 million people in the US without healthcare (2007)

3 Thesis The purpose of this study on the working class and the poor, as it pertains to treatment and access to healthcare, is to explore the unspoken and/or hidden inequalities in the United States healthcare system. Specifically, this analysis examines the income and educational attainment of patients with regard to the quality of care received.

4 Previous Literature Quality of Healthcare -Dutton (1978) -Nechas and Foley (1994) -Frank-Green (2004) Knowledge and Education -Light (2000) -Nechas and Foley (1994) -Anspach (1993)

5 Literature Review (contd.) Professional Dominance  Light (2004)  Malat (2001)

6 Social Construction Theory Donileen Loseke (2003) A social problem is not a stable category; rather its meaning is subjective. Claimsmaking occurs when a person or a group of people attempt to persuade an audience that a particular problem exists. “risk society” Typifications help the audience understand the “typical” so that behavior or events outside the typical are identified as a social problem.

7 Methodology Survey on access to healthcare and treatment by physicians 7 participants in the South Bend, IN community Hope Rescue Mission and Chapin Street Health Clinic

8 Findings Educational background varied amongst participants. 4 of the 7 participants were employed. All 7 participants were considered “working class” or “poor.” All 7 participants seek medical attention approximately every 3 months. Variance in timeliness of receiving medical attention.

9 Findings YesNoDon’t know Depends on the medical problem Do you feel confident asking your doctor questions? 6/7 (85%)1/7 (15%)0/7N/A Do you think your doctor discusses all options for treatment? 4/7 (57%)0/71/7 (15%)2/7 (28%) Do you fear challenging your doctor’s advice? 1/7 (15%)6/7 (85%)0/7N/A Do you have the option to change your primary doctor? 4/7 (57%)1/7 (15%)2/7 (28%)N/A

10 Miscellaneous Findings

11 Making Ends Meet The working class and poor populations are in high-risk, low-paying jobs. The separation between hourly and salary-paying jobs. Social mobility The cost of treatment

12 Future Research Surveying different geographic areas Possibly interviewing or participant observation Focusing more on race, age, gender, or ethnicity

13 Questions???? The greatest mistake in the treatment of diseases is that there are physicians for the body and physicians for the soul, although the two cannot be separated. ~Plato


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