This article examines the community organizing process for better health services for disenfranchised populations that cannot afford medical care in an affluent community. In response, concerned citizens and voluntary organizations have attempted to organize to transform policies and to implement new healthcare services. The author adopts a researcher participant role and examines the organizing process by studying six nonprofit agencies, one public health office, and shadowing the community organizer. The paper concludes that community organizing can be an especially challenging process when strategies are misaligned, stakeholders are dissentaneous, the public is apathetic to needs of low-income people, and solutions are diverse. (author abstract) #P4HEwebinarNovember2023
Community organizing for health Care: An analysis of the process
Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Bezboruah, Karabi C.
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Online
Date
May 2013
Publication
Journal of Community Practice
Abstract / Description
Copyright
Yes
Artifact Type
Research
Reference Type
Journal Article
Topic Area
Policy and Practice » Advocacy
Policy and Practice » Community-rooted/Participatory Research