In this article we are primarily concerned with the disparity between the ‘mentalhealth consumer’ label which carries implications of consumer power and consumerrights, and the reality underlying consumerist societies which presupposes a level of choice and spending power. The consumer label, while attempting to free the patient/client from an unequal relationship to her or his doctor or health care worker,has merely traded one inequity for another. For persons with a chronic mental illnesswho are either unemployed and/or welfare dependent, the consumer label haspotentially negative consequences. Not only does it fail to address the sometimes involuntary nature of mental healthcare, but within the current political climate, the neo-liberalist user-pays philosophy is imposed onto a group whose spending power and freedom of choice is already heavily compromised.
Journal article
Welfare, neo-liberalism, and the tough business of being a consumer
Australasian Journal of Business and Social Inquiry, Vol.2(1), pp.18-28
2004
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Welfare, neo-liberalism, and the tough business of being a consumer
- Creators
- Louise Holdsworth - Southern Cross UniversityDiana Sweeney - Southern Cross UniversityDavid Pollard - Eastern Cluster Acute Care Service Northern Rivers Area Health Service
- Publication Details
- Australasian Journal of Business and Social Inquiry, Vol.2(1), pp.18-28
- Identifiers
- 1543; 991012822189602368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Education; School of Business and Tourism; Centre for Gambling Education and Research; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
- Resource Type
- Journal article