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Refer rather than treat: coping with uncertainty in municipal primary care clinics in India

Radhika Gore (Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA)

International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy

ISSN: 0144-333X

Article publication date: 6 February 2024

Issue publication date: 4 April 2024

61

Abstract

Purpose

The institutional conditions of primary care provision remain understudied in low- and middle-income countries. This study analyzes how primary care doctors cope with medical uncertainty in municipal clinics in urban India. As street-level bureaucrats, the municipal doctors occupy two roles simultaneously: medical professional and state agent. They operate under conditions that characterize health systems in low-resource contexts globally: inadequate state investment, weak regulation and low societal trust. The study investigates how, in these conditions, the doctors respond to clinical risk, specifically related to noncommunicable diseases (NCDs).

Design/methodology/approach

The analysis draws on year-long ethnographic fieldwork in Pune (2013–14), a city of three million, including 30 semi-structured interviews with municipal doctors.

Findings

Interpreting their municipal mandate to exclude NCDs and reasoning their medical expertise as insufficient to treat NCDs, the doctors routinely referred NCD cases. They expressed concerns about violence from patients, negative media attention and unsupportive municipal authorities should anything go wrong clinically.

Originality/value

The study contextualizes street-level service-delivery in weak institutional conditions. Whereas street-level workers may commonly standardize practices to reduce workload, here the doctors routinized NCD care to avoid the sociopolitical consequences of clinical uncertainty. Modalities of the welfare state and medical care in India – manifest in weak municipal capacity and healthcare regulation – appear to compel restraint in service-delivery. The analysis highlights how norms and social relations may shape primary care provision and quality.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

I thank the Social Science Research Council for support of preliminary fieldwork and the INCITE program at Columbia University for post-fieldwork support that informed this research.

Citation

Gore, R. (2024), "Refer rather than treat: coping with uncertainty in municipal primary care clinics in India", International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, Vol. 44 No. 3/4, pp. 325-340. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSSP-04-2023-0090

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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