Abstract

Research on neoliberalism in health care has insufficiently explored the intermediary role of physicians in neoliberal subjectification. This paper studies the construct of the physician as a neoliberal subject in the Israeli health care system, using qualitative data from in-depth interviews with 21 medical specialists. We interviewed physicians from specialties in which private practice is both less common (infectious disease and intensive care) and more common (orthopedics, cardiology, and cardiothoracic surgery). Our analysis focused on two key issues: the physician's role in society and the value placed on health care. We found a spectrum of views. At one end, some perceived themselves as entrepreneurs, managing themselves both as an enterprise and a product, and perceived health care as a commodity. At the opposite end, we found a professional ethos that considered the physician as a public servant, and health care as a human right. Both views were in constant tension with neoliberal subjectivity. Further research should investigate the association between institutional belonging, whether public or private, and the internalization of the main characteristics of the neoliberal worldview.

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