Healer shopping in Africa: new evidence from rural-urban qualitative study of Ghanaian diabetes experiences

被引:124
作者
Aikins, AD [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Fac Social & Polit Sci, Dept Social & Dev Psychol, Cambridge CB2 3RQ, England
来源
BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL | 2005年 / 331卷 / 7519期
关键词
D O I
10.1136/bmj.331.7519.737
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objectives To provide counterevidence to existing literature on healer shopping in Africa through a systematic analysis of illness practices by Ghanaians with diabetes; to outline approaches towards improving patient centred health care and policy development regarding diabetes in Ghana. Design Longitudinal qualitative study with individual interviews, group interviews, and ethnographies. Settings Two urban towns (Accra, Tema) and two rural towns (Nkoranza and Kintampo) in Ghana. Participants 26 urban people and 41 rural people with diabetes with diverse profiles (sex, age, education, socioeconomic status, diabetes status). Results Six focus groups, 20 interviews, and three ethnographical studies were conducted to explore experiences and illness practices. Analysis identified four kinds of illness practice: biomedical management, spiritual action, cure seeking (passive and active), and medical inaction. Most participants privileged biomedicine over other health systems and emphasised biomedical management as ideal self care practice. However, the psychosocial impact of diabetes and the high cost of biomedical care drove cure seeking and medical inaction. Cure seeking constituted healer shopping between biomedicine, ethnomedicine, and faith healing; medical inaction constituted passive disengagement from medical management and active engagement with faith healing. Crucially, although spiritual causal theories of diabetes existed, they were secondary to dietary, lifestyle, and physiological theories and did not constitute the primary motivation for cure seeking. Cure seeking within unregulated ethnomedical systems and non-pharmacological faith healing systems exacerbated the complications of diabetes. Conclusions To minimise inappropriate healer shopping and maximise committed biomedical and regulated ethnomedical management for Ghanaians with diabetes, the greatest challenges lie in providing affordable pharmaceutical drugs, standardised ethnomedical drugs, recommended foods, and psychosocial support. For health systems, the greatest challenges lie in correcting structural deficiencies that impinge on biomedical practices, regulating ethnomedical diabetes treatment, and foregrounding faith healer practices within diabetes policy discussions.
引用
收藏
页码:737 / 742
页数:8
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]   Exploring biomedical and ethnomedical representations of diabetes in Ghana and the scope for cross-professional collaboration: a social psychological approach to health policy [J].
Aikins, AD .
SOCIAL SCIENCE INFORMATION SUR LES SCIENCES SOCIALES, 2002, 41 (04) :625-652
[2]  
AIKINS AD, 2004, THESIS LONDON SCH EC
[3]   Strengthening quality and continuity of diabetes care in rural Ghana: A critical social psychological approach [J].
Aikins, ADG .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2004, 9 (02) :295-309
[4]   Living with diabetes in rural and urban Ghana: A critical social psychological examination of illness action and scope for intervention [J].
Aikins, ADG .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 8 (05) :557-572
[5]   Diabetes in Ghana: a community based prevalence study in Greater Accra [J].
Amoah, AGB ;
Owusu, SK ;
Adjei, S .
DIABETES RESEARCH AND CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2002, 56 (03) :197-205
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1980, CONTENT ANAL
[7]   Africa and christianity on the threshold of the third millennium: The religious dimension [J].
Bediako, K .
AFRICAN AFFAIRS, 2000, 99 (395) :303-323
[8]  
DEJONG J, 1909, TRADITIONAL MED SUBS
[9]  
DeJong J., 1991, TRADITIONAL MED SUBS
[10]  
GASKELL G, 2000, QUALITATIVE RES TEXT, V39