2020
DOI: 10.1177/0020731420922827
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health

Abstract: Deepening crises now affect not only the capitalist health system in the United States, but also the national health programs of countries that have achieved universal access to services. In our recent collaborative book, Health Care Under the Knife: Moving Beyond Capitalism for Our Health, we analyze these changing structural conditions and argue that the struggle toward viable national health programs now must become part of a struggle to move beyond capitalism. Privatization, cutbacks in public-sector servi… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
12
0
1

Year Published

2021
2021
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
7

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
references
References 10 publications
2
12
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Hence, employing a S/SDOH framework to examine capitalism and classism at a macrosystem level would reveal that racial capitalism via occupational segregation increases AD/ADRD disparities over time (e.g., corporate oligarchies of today vs. robber barons of the 19th century) 31 . The natural experiment of capitalism and classism on AD/ADRD could be captured in modern research by comparing the impact of privatized health care with national universal health care programs 32 . Though with limited access to monetary resources that can increase opportunities for better quality of life (e.g., nutrient‐rich foods, adequate housing, health care, health insurance, transportation, low‐pollution neighborhoods with greenspace and recreation, internet), marginalized groups will continue to experience the greatest burden of AD/ADRD without economic intervention.…”
Section: Results: a Globalized Macrosystemmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Hence, employing a S/SDOH framework to examine capitalism and classism at a macrosystem level would reveal that racial capitalism via occupational segregation increases AD/ADRD disparities over time (e.g., corporate oligarchies of today vs. robber barons of the 19th century) 31 . The natural experiment of capitalism and classism on AD/ADRD could be captured in modern research by comparing the impact of privatized health care with national universal health care programs 32 . Though with limited access to monetary resources that can increase opportunities for better quality of life (e.g., nutrient‐rich foods, adequate housing, health care, health insurance, transportation, low‐pollution neighborhoods with greenspace and recreation, internet), marginalized groups will continue to experience the greatest burden of AD/ADRD without economic intervention.…”
Section: Results: a Globalized Macrosystemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…31 The natural experiment of capitalism and classism on AD/ADRD could be captured in modern research by comparing the impact of privatized health care with national universal health care programs. 32 Though with limited access to monetary resources that can increase opportunities for better quality of life (e.g., nutrient-rich foods, adequate housing, health care, health insurance, transportation, low-pollution neighborhoods with greenspace and recreation, internet), marginalized groups will continue to experience the greatest burden of AD/ADRD without economic intervention. This is an underexplored area of AD/ADRD that merits attention.…”
Section: Sectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Дерегулирование капитала и рынка труда, политика жесткой социальной экономии, коммерциализация основных функций системы здравоохранения, а также другие факторы, способствовали распространению эпидемических болезней, одним из которых в последнее время стал COVID-19 [6, c. 272]. Неолиберализм превратил медицинское обслуживание в привилегированную область накопления капитала и сверхприбылей в ущерб права индивида на здоровье и развития доступного для всех общественного здравоохранения [25]. Поэтому, недостатки неолиберального капитализма в вопросах здравоохранения стали особо заметны в связи с пандемией, которая показала, что как сам неолиберальный капитализм с фокусом на нерегулируемый свободный рынок, так и коммерциализированная система здравоохранения, созданная этой моделью капитализма, в корне лишены как средств, так и философии обеспечения достойного и эффективного здравоохранения для общества в целом и каждому индивиду в отдельности, исключая особые привилегированные группы.…”
Section: уроки пандемии Covid-19 и опыт скандинавских странunclassified
“…Some researchers have argued that doctors have been undergoing proletarianization as U.S. health care becomes increasingly financialized and corporatized. 33,46–48 As described by physician and sociologist Howard Waitzkin, the ICD-10 transition can be situated within this phenomenon as one of many recent bureaucratic burdens that have reduced doctors’ clinical autonomy and contributed to an increasingly corporatized workplace at the expense of patients. 33…”
Section: The State and The Corporate Governance Of Us Health Carementioning
confidence: 99%