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The pandemic is not the great equalizer: front-line labor and rationing in COVID-19 critical care.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Navuluri, N; Solomon, HS; Hargett, CW; Kussin, PS
Published in: Public Health Action
December 21, 2022

BACKGROUND: Framed as "the great-equalizer," the COVID-19 pandemic has intensified pressure to adapt critical care labor and resulted in rationing by healthcare workers across the world. OBJECTIVE: To critically investigate how hospital intensive care units are critical sites of care labor and examine how rationing highlights key features of healthcare labor and its inequalities. METHODS: A practice-oriented ethnographic study was conducted in a United States academic ICU by a medical anthropologist and medical intensivists with global health expertise. The analysis drew on 57 in-depth interviews and 25 months of participant observation between 2020 and 2021. RESULTS: Embodied labor constitutes sites and practices of shortage or rationing along three domains: equipment and technology, labor, and emotions and energy. The resulting workers' practices of adaptation and resilience point to a potentially more robust global health labor politics based on seeing rationing as work. CONCLUSION: Studies of pandemic rationing practices and critical care labor can disrupt too-simple comparative narratives of Global North/South divides. Further studies and efforts must address the toll of healthcare labor.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Public Health Action

DOI

ISSN

2220-8372

Publication Date

December 21, 2022

Volume

12

Issue

4

Start / End Page

186 / 190

Location

France
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Navuluri, N., Solomon, H. S., Hargett, C. W., & Kussin, P. S. (2022). The pandemic is not the great equalizer: front-line labor and rationing in COVID-19 critical care. Public Health Action, 12(4), 186–190. https://doi.org/10.5588/pha.22.0025
Navuluri, N., H. S. Solomon, C. W. Hargett, and P. S. Kussin. “The pandemic is not the great equalizer: front-line labor and rationing in COVID-19 critical care.Public Health Action 12, no. 4 (December 21, 2022): 186–90. https://doi.org/10.5588/pha.22.0025.
Navuluri N, Solomon HS, Hargett CW, Kussin PS. The pandemic is not the great equalizer: front-line labor and rationing in COVID-19 critical care. Public Health Action. 2022 Dec 21;12(4):186–90.
Navuluri, N., et al. “The pandemic is not the great equalizer: front-line labor and rationing in COVID-19 critical care.Public Health Action, vol. 12, no. 4, Dec. 2022, pp. 186–90. Pubmed, doi:10.5588/pha.22.0025.
Navuluri N, Solomon HS, Hargett CW, Kussin PS. The pandemic is not the great equalizer: front-line labor and rationing in COVID-19 critical care. Public Health Action. 2022 Dec 21;12(4):186–190.

Published In

Public Health Action

DOI

ISSN

2220-8372

Publication Date

December 21, 2022

Volume

12

Issue

4

Start / End Page

186 / 190

Location

France