Cyclical Interdependencies: A Summary And Analysis

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Furthermore, the interviewee’s ideologies can also be related to “poverty caused by cumulative and cyclical interdependencies”, which “builds on the components of each of the other theories in that it looks at the individual and their community as caught in a spiral of opportunity and problems, and once problems dominate they close other opportunities and create cumulative set of problems that make any effective response nearly impossible” (Bradshaw, 2010. p.45). Bradshaw (2010), talks about poverty that is caused by cumulative and cyclical Interdependencies looks at the “lack of employment leads to the lack of consumption and spending due to inadequate incomes, and how health problems and the inability to afford medication, good diet, and …show more content…

The interviewee talks about Government policies, which includes the education system. The welfare system and rules are not set up properly to exit someone from welfare. Where the example gave previous would also relate to this perspective, she gave an example where person on welfare receive drug cards, and these cards in most cases pay for all the drugs they need. How a while back the Ontario Government stated that they would continue to pay for the diabetic testing strips, the medicine required as well as the actual needles, but would not pay for the syringes. A single person on welfare receives about $540.00 per month, when you factor in shelter and food there is not much money left. These specific clients re-used the syringes over and over again to the point where the measurement scale used for measuring the amount of medicine going into the syringe had faded and the clients were either getting to much and too little insulin. In several of these cases, these clients were admitted to the hospital and had longer stays than usual in order to stabilize their insulin levels. Furthermore, She recognized that having a mental health illness can come with a stigma and discrimination which at times prevents these clients from securing and maintaining employment. When clients experience a mental illness episode or they come off their medication, they stop treatment or they have not been diagnosed yet, it can seriously interfere with their education or their job. When they are unable to finish school or keep their employment, they are unable to make money which results in

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