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'We shed tears, but there is no one there to wipe them up for us': narratives of (mis)trust in a materially deprived community
[journal article]
Abstract This article reports on a qualitative study in a materially deprived locality in northern England, which originally aimed to explore local residents' views of proposed changes to local health care provision. However, participants also quickly moved the research agenda onto widespread discussions of ... view more
This article reports on a qualitative study in a materially deprived locality in northern England, which originally aimed to explore local residents' views of proposed changes to local health care provision. However, participants also quickly moved the research agenda onto widespread discussions of (mis)trust. Unlike much sociological literature that defines trust as operating on two levels (inter-personal and system-based), their narratives of trust were constructed on several inter-connected levels. We explore mistrust in local general practitioners (GPs) as a factor of mistrust of a number of local and national organizations and social systems, rather than solely related to the medical system. Widespread mistrust of 'authority' was narrated through a shared history of disinvestment and loss of services in the locality and 'broken promises' by a range of institutions, which precipitated feelings of social exclusion and disembeddedness.... view less
Classification
Medical Sociology
Health Policy
Free Keywords
dependence; inter-personal trust; materially deprived communities; social inclusion/ exclusion; systems-based trust
Document language
English
Publication Year
2006
Page/Pages
p. 283-301
Journal
Health, 10 (2006) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1363459306064481
Status
Postprint; peer reviewed
Licence
PEER Licence Agreement (applicable only to documents from PEER project)