Deservingness: migration and health in social context

Author:

Holmes Seth MORCID,Castañeda Ernesto,Geeraert Jeremy,Castaneda Heide,Probst UrsulaORCID,Zeldes Nina,Willen Sarah SORCID,Dibba Yusupha,Frankfurter Raphael,Lie Anne Kveim,Askjer John Fredrik,Fjeld HeidiORCID

Abstract

This article brings the social science concept of ‘deservingness’ to bear on clinical cases of transnational migrant patients. Based on the authors’ medical social science research, health delivery practice and clinical work from multiple locations in Africa. Europe and the Americas, the article describes three clinical cases in which assumptions of deservingness have significant implications for the morbidity and mortality of migrant patients. The concept of deservingness allows us to maintain a critical awareness of the often unspoken presumptions of which categories of patients are more or less deserving of access to and quality of care, regardless of their formal legal eligibility. Many transnational migrants with ambiguous legal status who rely on public healthcare experience exclusion from care or poor treatment based on notions of deservingness held by health clinic staff, clinicians and health system planners. The article proposes several implications for clinicians, health professional education, policymaking and advocacy. A critical lens on deservingness can help global health professionals, systems and policymakers confront and change entrenched patterns of unequal access to and differential quality of care for migrant patients. In this way, health professionals can work more effectively for global health equity.

Funder

Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst

Peder Sather Center for Advanced Study

Paoli Calmettes Chair IMéRA Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Study

Global Futures Initiative, Georgetown University

Berkeley Center for Social Medicine

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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