Navigating the Cultures of Health Care and Health Insurance
Highly skilled migrants in the U.S.
Nina Zeldes
What are the barriers preventing migrants from accessing and successfully utilizing health care in their new home country? Do these barriers vary across different migrant origin countries? And are they still a problem for highly skilled migrants, who often have well-paid jobs and health insurance provided by their employers?
Based on field research conducted in the Washington D.C. area, Navigating the Cultures of Health Care and Health Insurance takes a mixed methods, qualitative and quantitative approach to the study of foreign patients’ utilization and assessment of health care in the US. Through interviews with both health care providers and patients, attitudes towards US health insurance and medical treatment are compared for migrants from three countries with very different cultural backgrounds and health insurance systems: Germany, India and Japan.
Combined with an in-depth literature review, historical and contemporary surveys of health care across countries and analysis of health-related terms in the media, the results of this research indicate that foreign patients’ barriers to good health care persist despite access to health care services and insurance coverage, and reveal recurring transnational care seeking patterns, such as bringing medicines from abroad, delaying treatment for medical visits, insurance juggling and more. By describing their difficulties in integrating into the US health care system, the migrants in this study show the challenges and the potential for improvements in providing the care that migrants need in their new home.
Nina Zeldes is a health researcher in Public Citizen’s Health Research Group in Washington D.C.
List of figures and tables
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
2 Context and methodology
3 ‘I really dislike insurance… I don't know how the concept works’: the culture of health insurance
4 ‘I saw an army of doctors walk in…’: highly skilled migrants’ experiences with health care and biomedical diversity in the United States
5 ‘Here I do think before I go to the doctor’: highly skilled migrants’ barriers to accessing and utilizing health care in the United States
6 ‘Take a vacation, go back to India and get a treatment there’: transnational health care practices and strategies navigating US health care and health insurance culture
7 Conclusion and outlook
References
Index
Format: Open Access PDF
232 Pages
1 B&W illustration
Copyright: © 2023
ISBN: 9781800083646
Publication: April 20, 2023
Series: Culture and Health
Related products
Ageing with Smartphones in Ireland
There are not many books about how people get younger. It doesn’t happen very...Ageing with Smartphones in Uganda
Ageing with Smartphones in Uganda is based on a 16-month ethnography about ex...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban Brazil
With people living longer all over the world, ageing has been framed as a soc...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban Chile
What does it mean to be ageing in Chile as a migrant? What does it mean to be...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban China
If we want to understand contemporary China, the key is through understanding...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban Italy
‘Who am I at this (st)age? Where am I and where should I be, and how and wher...