Social Capital and Cultural Health Capital in Primary Care: The Case of Group Medical Visits.

TitleSocial Capital and Cultural Health Capital in Primary Care: The Case of Group Medical Visits.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2025
AuthorsThompson-Lastad, A, Harrison, JM, Shim, JK
JournalSociol Health Illn
Volume47
Issue1
Paginatione13868
Date Published2025 Jan
ISSN1467-9566
KeywordsAdult, Female, Grounded Theory, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care, Qualitative Research, Shared Medical Appointments, Social Capital, Social Support, United States
Abstract

This article focuses on an empirical setting that upends the clinician-patient dyadic norm: group medical visits (GMVs), in which multiple patients gather in the same space for medical care, health education and peer support. Our grounded theory analysis draws on participant observation and interviews (N = 53) with patients and staff of GMVs at four safety-net healthcare organisations in the United States. We delineate (1) how group medical visits provide health-focused social networks that facilitate the mobilisation of social capital, (2) how the organisationally embedded relationships that comprise group visits are made possible through extended time that is part of the GMV field and (3) how clinicians have opportunities rarely found in other settings to learn from patients, using knowledge accrued from GMV networks to advance their own skills, thereby converting social capital into provider cultural health capital. GMVs provide a rich empirical site for understanding the ways in which organisational arrangements can shape opportunities for patients and clinicians to cultivate and mobilise social capital and cultural health capital, and in doing so, materially shift experiences of receiving and providing healthcare.

DOI10.1111/1467-9566.13868
Alternate JournalSociol Health Illn
PubMed ID39680019
PubMed Central IDPMC11648586
Grant ListK01MD015766 / MD / NIMHD NIH HHS / United States
2T32 AT003997 / AT / NCCIH NIH HHS / United States
F31AT008747 / AT / NCCIH NIH HHS / United States