Bureaucratically distorted communication: The case of managed mental health care

被引:0
作者
Morelock, Jeremiah C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Boston Coll, Dept Sociol, McGuinn Hall,140 Commonwealth Ave, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA
关键词
healthcare; mental health; discourse; surveillance; Habermas; RATIONALIZATION; ORGANIZATIONS;
D O I
10.1057/s41285-016-0015-0
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 0831 ;
摘要
Mental health treatment providers today are subject to insurance company regulation. Using grounded theory to analyze 33 interviews of treatment providers, I portray this regulation as a form of surveillance that operates through discourse, and ask how treatment providers communicate with and through this system. My findings reveal that mental health treatment providers are required to deliver information to insurers within a rationalized medical discourse that is supposed to represent treatment, but is inadequate for the task. I argue this bureaucratic system demands that providers communicate with insurers in a distorted way. These findings are theorized in dialogue with Habermas' communication typology and his theory of lifeworld colonization. I argue that the case of managed mental health care presents an arena of communication and colonization which is best suited by building from the Habermasian framework. Colonization occurs, yet on within a specific channel of communication, despite pretensions of thoroughgoing colonization. Systematically generated communicative distortions occur, but often without necessarily involving self-deceptions or strategic private agendas. This paper contributes to Habermasian theory by suggesting it could be further elaborated upon to account in for forms of colonization and distorted communication that occur in varied social contexts.
引用
收藏
页码:436 / 457
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Clinicians as advocates: An exploratory study of responses to managed care by mental health professionals
    Nancy Wolff
    Mark Schlesinger
    [J]. The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research, 2002, 29 : 274 - 287
  • [32] Can managed care meet the mental health needs of very young children?
    Koyanagi, C
    Lorber, M
    [J]. INFANTS & YOUNG CHILDREN, 1997, 10 (01) : 38 - 46
  • [33] Substitution of Psychiatric Care by Primary Care Physicians: Impact of the Iowa Medicaid Managed Mental Health Care Plan
    Barbara M. Rohland
    James E. Rohrer
    Dan Culica
    [J]. Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research, 1999, 26 : 369 - 371
  • [34] Impact of Mental Health Comorbidities on Health Care Utilization and Expenditure in a Large US Managed Care Adult Population with ADHD
    Kawatkar, Aniket A.
    Knight, Tara K.
    Moss, Robert A.
    Sikirica, Vanja
    Chu, Li-Hao
    Hodgkins, Paul
    Erder, M. Haim
    Nichol, Michael B.
    [J]. VALUE IN HEALTH, 2014, 17 (06) : 661 - 668
  • [35] Substitution of psychiatric care by primary care physicians: Impact of the Iowa Medicaid managed mental health care plan
    Rohland, BM
    Rohrer, JE
    Culica, D
    [J]. ADMINISTRATION AND POLICY IN MENTAL HEALTH, 1999, 26 (05): : 369 - 371
  • [36] Privatized medicaid managed care in massachusetts: Disposition in child and adolescent mental health emergencies
    Joanne Nicholson
    Stephen Dine Young
    Lorna J. Simon
    William H. Fisher
    Anne Bateman
    [J]. The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research, 1998, 25 : 279 - 292
  • [37] The impact of managed care on community mental health outpatient services in New York State
    Cypres, A
    Landsberg, G
    Spellmann, M
    [J]. ADMINISTRATION AND POLICY IN MENTAL HEALTH, 1997, 24 (06): : 509 - 521
  • [39] The impact of managed care on community mental health outpatient services in new york state
    Adrienne Cypres
    Gerald Landsberg
    Mark Spellmann
    [J]. Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research, 1997, 24 : 509 - 521
  • [40] The Exercise of Authority by Social Workers in a Managed Mental Health Care Organization: A Critical Ethnography
    Bransford, Cassandra
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PROGRESSIVE HUMAN SERVICES, 2006, 17 (02) : 63 - 85