Violence at Rikers Island: Does the Doctor Make It Worse? A Clinician Ethnographer’s Work Amidst Carceral Structural Violence
Sue K. Violence at Rikers Island: Does the Doctor Make It Worse? A Clinician Ethnographer’s Work Amidst Carceral Structural Violence. Culture, Medicine, And Psychiatry 2022, 1-20. PMID: 36445550, PMCID: PMC9707201, DOI: 10.1007/s11013-022-09812-2.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchStructural violenceSpaces of violenceField of anthropologyComplex social phenomenaCarceral institutionsSocial sufferingEngaged dialogueClinical ethnographyViolenceHealth justiceSocial phenomenaCommunity membersInterpersonal violenceIncarcerated peopleSocial criticismNew York CityNational spotlightRikers IslandMultiple axesPersonal reflectionJail systemYork CitySubjectivityLaborArticleUsing a structural vulnerability framework to understand the impact of COVID‐19 on the lives of Medicaid beneficiaries receiving substance use treatment in New York City
Zhen‐Duan J, Gade N, Falgas‐Bagué I, Sue KL, DeJonckheere M, Alegría M. Using a structural vulnerability framework to understand the impact of COVID‐19 on the lives of Medicaid beneficiaries receiving substance use treatment in New York City. Health Services Research 2022, 57: 1104-1111. PMID: 35340033, PMCID: PMC9111318, DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.13975.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNew York CityLow-income individualsStructural vulnerabilityPrimary qualitative dataDepth qualitative interviewsQualitative research approachCOVID-19 pandemicThematic analysis approachYork CityDepth interviewsEconomic disparitiesQualitative interviewsVulnerability frameworkEthnic minority adultsFood insecurityStructural competencyQualitative dataSocial relationshipsHousing conditionsThematic analysisCommunity resourcesResearch approachCOVID-19Theoretical frameworkHome orders