Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical Administration
In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis many countries embarked on a prolonged period of public sector ‘austerity’ which for some included seeking dramatic reductions in social security spending. It is in this context that the research investigates the negative impacts of interactions with the...
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2019-09-01
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Online Access: | https://www.sjdr.se/articles/607 |
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doaj-7aae10458bb941e98b597cb8da040b4e2020-11-25T02:15:34ZengStockholm University PressScandinavian Journal of Disability Research1745-30112019-09-0121110.16993/sjdr.607532Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical AdministrationHarriet Clarke0Fiona Carmichael1Hareth Al-Janabi2University of BirminghamUniversity of BirminghamUniversity of BirminghamIn the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis many countries embarked on a prolonged period of public sector ‘austerity’ which for some included seeking dramatic reductions in social security spending. It is in this context that the research investigates the negative impacts of interactions with the UK disability benefits system on the lives of disabled people. The research uses in-depth semi-structured interviews and a focus group to study the experiences of 49 people who either had an impairment or chronic health concern and/or were family carers for an adult or child with these concerns. The analysis identified four aggregate dimensions evidenced by the transcript data: harmful health and well-being consequences, negative financial and resource impacts, perverse employment effects and wider social disability concerns. These dimensions highlight how interactions with ‘social security’ policy in the contemporary context can have harmful, iatrogenic consequences for disabled people and their families.https://www.sjdr.se/articles/607Social security, iatrogenesis, disability, family |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Harriet Clarke Fiona Carmichael Hareth Al-Janabi |
spellingShingle |
Harriet Clarke Fiona Carmichael Hareth Al-Janabi Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical Administration Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research Social security, iatrogenesis, disability, family |
author_facet |
Harriet Clarke Fiona Carmichael Hareth Al-Janabi |
author_sort |
Harriet Clarke |
title |
Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical Administration |
title_short |
Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical Administration |
title_full |
Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical Administration |
title_fullStr |
Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical Administration |
title_full_unstemmed |
Adverse Effects of Social Security on Disabled People and Their Families in the UK: Iatrogenic Outcomes of Quasi-Clinical Administration |
title_sort |
adverse effects of social security on disabled people and their families in the uk: iatrogenic outcomes of quasi-clinical administration |
publisher |
Stockholm University Press |
series |
Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research |
issn |
1745-3011 |
publishDate |
2019-09-01 |
description |
In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis many countries embarked on a prolonged period of public sector ‘austerity’ which for some included seeking dramatic reductions in social security spending. It is in this context that the research investigates the negative impacts of interactions with the UK disability benefits system on the lives of disabled people. The research uses in-depth semi-structured interviews and a focus group to study the experiences of 49 people who either had an impairment or chronic health concern and/or were family carers for an adult or child with these concerns. The analysis identified four aggregate dimensions evidenced by the transcript data: harmful health and well-being consequences, negative financial and resource impacts, perverse employment effects and wider social disability concerns. These dimensions highlight how interactions with ‘social security’ policy in the contemporary context can have harmful, iatrogenic consequences for disabled people and their families. |
topic |
Social security, iatrogenesis, disability, family |
url |
https://www.sjdr.se/articles/607 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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