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Health Care Off the Books

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Millions of low-income African Americans in the United States lack access to health care. How do they treat their health care problems? In Health Care Off the Books, Danielle T. Raudenbush provides...
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  • 11 February 2020
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Millions of low-income African Americans in the United States lack access to health care. How do they treat their health care problems? In Health Care Off the Books, Danielle T. Raudenbush provides an answer that challenges public perceptions and prior scholarly work. Informed by three and a half years of fieldwork in a public housing development, Raudenbush shows how residents who face obstacles to health care gain access to pharmaceutical drugs, medical equipment, physician reference manuals, and insurance cards by mobilizing social networks that include not only their neighbors but also local physicians. However, membership in these social networks is not universal, and some residents are forced to turn to a robust street market to obtain medicine. For others, health problems simply go untreated.

Raudenbush reconceptualizes U.S. health care as a formal-informal hybrid system and explains why many residents who do have access to health services also turn to informal strategies to treat their health problems. While the practices described in the book may at times be beneficial to people’s health, they also have the potential to do serious harm. By understanding this hybrid system, we can evaluate its effects and gain new insight into the sources of social and racial disparities in health outcomes.
 

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Price: $14.95
Pages: 208
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 11 February 2020
ISBN: 9780520973602
Format: eBook
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Acknowledgments

1. Introduction: Health Care Access in America and
the Formal-Informal Hybrid Health Care System

2. Access to Care in Jackson Homes

3. Sick, Poor, and without Care: Individual Responses
to Barriers and the Emergence of a Hybrid System

4. “On the Poor Side of Things”: The Role of the Local
Community in the Hybrid System

5. The Doctor Is In: Physicians in the Hybrid System

6. After the Affordable Care Act

7. Conclusion

Methodological Appendix
Notes
References
Index