Journal of Aging Studies
Volume 34, 2015, Pages 29-37
The distortions of care needs and medical professionalism: The ruling practices of migrant labor policy in Taiwan (Article)
Liang L.-F.*
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a
Institute of Health and Welfare Policy, National Yang-Ming University, No. 155, Linong Street, Beitou District, Taipei City, 112, Taiwan
Abstract
According to Taiwanese government policies and regulations, families planning to hire migrant care workers must apply for a medical assessment of the needs of elderly people destined to be cared for. The physician conducting this assessment acts as a gatekeeper who carries out her/his work with state and medical profession authority to identify, define, and regulate older people's needs. Using institutional ethnography as the method of inquiry, this article locates the problematic nature of the medical assessment as an entry point to an inquiry into how the care needs met by migrant workers are textually-mediated. This article begins by telling the daily story of an old woman and her live-in migrant worker to point out the standpoint of care recipients and their families where the inquiry anchors. I examine the physicians' daily working activities of medical assessment to discover how policy subordinates people's interests to the governmental purpose. © 2015 Elsevier Inc.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84927658628&doi=10.1016%2fj.jaging.2015.04.001&partnerID=40&md5=0aacc7773cb7b66dd218056df202380e
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2015.04.001
ISSN: 08904065
Original Language: English