From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care Reform

The current frailties of the Romanian health care system are often explained by resorting to the previous regime’s institutional framework, rarely accepting that they are also the product of post-1990 reforms and the neoliberal means of system reconfiguration. This paper provides an ethnographic acc...

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Main Author: Palaga Cristine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-06-01
Series:Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai Sociologia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/subbs-2015-0005
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spelling doaj-f48f02148b4e43f09b2cc50f4de96b582021-09-05T14:00:48ZengSciendoStudia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai Sociologia2066-04642015-06-016110312210.1515/subbs-2015-0005subbs-2015-0005From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care ReformPalaga Cristine0 PhD Candidate in Sociology at the Babeș-Bolyai University Cluj-NapocaThe current frailties of the Romanian health care system are often explained by resorting to the previous regime’s institutional framework, rarely accepting that they are also the product of post-1990 reforms and the neoliberal means of system reconfiguration. This paper provides an ethnographic account of the ways in which two “products” of these reforms actively contribute to the augmentation of private medical services and to the diminishing access to quality care in the public system: the bureaucratization of primary medicine and the “dual medical practice”. More specifically, I use the concept of “informal exchanges” in order to explore the variety of transactions that occur between patients and the health care staff and to document the means through which its main social actors understand, reproduce, legitimize or blame the very existence of these practices. Then, I analyze how referrals to private medical units increasingly replace informal payments, simultaneously laying even harder obstacles in the access to health care for those in need.https://doi.org/10.1515/subbs-2015-0005informal paymentspostsocialist health care reformdual medical practiceprivate health caremedical anthropology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Palaga Cristine
spellingShingle Palaga Cristine
From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care Reform
Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai Sociologia
informal payments
postsocialist health care reform
dual medical practice
private health care
medical anthropology
author_facet Palaga Cristine
author_sort Palaga Cristine
title From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care Reform
title_short From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care Reform
title_full From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care Reform
title_fullStr From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care Reform
title_full_unstemmed From Informal Exchanges to Dual Practices. The Shadows of the Romanian Health Care Reform
title_sort from informal exchanges to dual practices. the shadows of the romanian health care reform
publisher Sciendo
series Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai Sociologia
issn 2066-0464
publishDate 2015-06-01
description The current frailties of the Romanian health care system are often explained by resorting to the previous regime’s institutional framework, rarely accepting that they are also the product of post-1990 reforms and the neoliberal means of system reconfiguration. This paper provides an ethnographic account of the ways in which two “products” of these reforms actively contribute to the augmentation of private medical services and to the diminishing access to quality care in the public system: the bureaucratization of primary medicine and the “dual medical practice”. More specifically, I use the concept of “informal exchanges” in order to explore the variety of transactions that occur between patients and the health care staff and to document the means through which its main social actors understand, reproduce, legitimize or blame the very existence of these practices. Then, I analyze how referrals to private medical units increasingly replace informal payments, simultaneously laying even harder obstacles in the access to health care for those in need.
topic informal payments
postsocialist health care reform
dual medical practice
private health care
medical anthropology
url https://doi.org/10.1515/subbs-2015-0005
work_keys_str_mv AT palagacristine frominformalexchangestodualpracticestheshadowsoftheromanianhealthcarereform
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