Patients' work and fluid trajectories: Access to medicines for oncological and rare diseases in Russia

Soc Sci Med. 2023 Jan:317:115613. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115613. Epub 2022 Dec 10.

Abstract

Health policy studies usually conceptualise access to medicines as a result of the institutional configuration of policies, legislation, and pharmaceutical markets. This study adopts a different approach that stems from the sociology of health and Science and Technology Studies (STS). Based on an ethnographically inspired qualitative research of access practices of patients with oncological and rare diseases in Russia, we argue that access to medicines is a fluid and unstable trajectory constructed by the everyday practices of patients. Instead of seeing patients as passive recipients of institutionally arranged access, we focus on their practices of building access and identify four types of work they do to steer their access trajectories in the desired direction. These types of work include persisting work, complying work, adjusting work, and knowing work. In many studies of access, these types of work remain invisible, and thus the efforts and skills that patients need to make access possible remain unnoticed, undervalued, and unaccounted for.

Keywords: Access to medicines; Cancer; Patients' work; Rare diseases; Trajectory of access.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Health Policy
  • Health Services Accessibility*
  • Humans
  • Qualitative Research
  • Rare Diseases* / drug therapy
  • Russia