Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 31
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Base de dados
Tipo de documento
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Ecol Food Nutr ; 63(4): 323-342, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38824683

RESUMO

How people speak of hunger extends beyond statements about food adequacy; people's remarks may reflect experiences of poverty and feelings of vulnerability, and may be used to request help. In this article, we build on the idea of idioms of distress to conceptualize hunger talk as expressing more than an empty belly. We draw on ethnographic data gathered in two settings in South Africa: one a peri-urban area under traditional jurisdiction in the Eastern Cape Province; the other an inner-city suburb of the largest city, Johannesburg, in Gauteng. Hunger-related idioms of distress help illustrate the complex interplay of social, economic, and cultural factors, and allow people to speak of various affective and material aspects of their lives.


Assuntos
Abastecimento de Alimentos , Fome , Pobreza , População Urbana , África do Sul , Humanos , Insegurança Alimentar , Assistência Alimentar
2.
Sociol Health Illn ; 2023 Oct 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37897708

RESUMO

A formal Gender Dysphoria classification- as outlined in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders- is a prerequisite for the reimbursement of both gender-affirming medical care and transgender mental health care in the Netherlands. Gender Dysphoria and its conceptual precursors have always been moving targets: moving due to research, policy, care practices and activism both within and outside of medicine. This raises the question of what Gender Dysphoria is exactly. To elucidate this question, we turn to the people who use the concept in clinical practice to come to a diagnosis and treatment indication: mental health professionals working in gender-affirming medical care and transgender mental health care. Using a material semiotics approach, we reflect upon how Gender Dysphoria is done in clinical practice. Based on an analysis of seventeen practice-based interviews with clinicians as well as an examination of clinical guidelines and texts, we describe four modes in which Gender Dysphoria is ordered. These modes of ordering illustrate that Gender Dysphoria is not one, but multiple. We illustrate how in the mode of isolating, Gender Dysphoria is something which is carefully isolated from mental disorders, while in the modes doing the future and narrating, Gender Dysphoria is done as a continuous and predictable object of care. Such orderings of Gender Dysphoria potentially conflict with a fourth mode of ordering: the doing of diversity in transgender health care. The study's findings provide empirical insights into how transgender health care is currently done in The Netherlands and provide a foundation on which ethical debates on what good transgender health care should entail.

3.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 17(1): 20, 2017 01 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28069047

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In the quest to achieve early HIV treatment goals, national HIV treatment programmes dependent on international funding have been dramatically redesigned over the last 5 years. Bottlenecks in treatment provision are conceived of as health system problems to be addressed via structural and logistical fixes (routine HIV testing, point-of-care equipment, nurse-led antiretroviral treatment initiation, and patient tracking). Patient perspectives are rarely taken into account when such fixes are being considered. Patients' therapeutic experiences often remain at the periphery during the planning stage and are only considered within the context of monitoring and evaluation audits once programmes are up and running. METHODS: Ethnographic research was conducted in five clinics in Swaziland between 2012 and 2014. Participatory approaches were used to collect data; the first author trained as an HIV counsellor in order to collect observational data on the continuum of care, and conducted in-depth interviews with interlocutors involved at the different phases. RESULTS: Although recently adopted global HIV strategies have proven effective in scaling up treatment in Swaziland, our research demonstrates that the effort to expand services rapidly and to meet donor targets has also undermined patients' therapeutic experiences and overtaxed health workers, both of which are counterproductive to the ultimate goal of treatment scale-up. This article provides a perspective beyond the structural elements that impede universal treatment, and explores patient views and experiences of the strategies adopted to support further treatment expansion, with a particular focus on the shifting of key care and logistical tasks to expert clients. CONCLUSION: We argue that in the quest to achieve universal early access to treatment, both donors and states must go beyond strengthening health systems and strive to enhance the quality of patient experiences and take seriously health worker limitations.


Assuntos
Instituições de Assistência Ambulatorial/organização & administração , Antirretrovirais/uso terapêutico , Continuidade da Assistência ao Paciente , Infecções por HIV/terapia , Antropologia Cultural , Essuatíni , Infecções por HIV/diagnóstico , Infecções por HIV/etnologia , Pessoal de Saúde , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Carga de Trabalho
4.
AIDS Care ; 28 Suppl 4: 8-17, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27314906

RESUMO

Drawing from 18 months of ethnographic fieldwork in one urban and one rural setting in Swaziland, involving 13 case studies of adolescents living with HIV, in this article we explore the meaning of the family as it applies to Swazi adolescents' everyday life. Our findings suggest that the meaning of the family is constantly evolving and transforming based on changing needs of, and expectations by, adolescents in different contexts and moments of the care continuum. Central to the meaning of the family is a strong desire for belonging - that is, being accepted, welcomed and appreciated. Traditional institutions that used to regulate where children belong still shape adolescents' perceptions, hopes and desires, but may also prevent their realisation. Support groups are important but do not substitute for the familial belongings adolescents living with HIV have lost, and long for. Policymakers, programme managers and health providers working with adolescents living with HIV need to embrace the complexity and dynamism of the meaning of family and base their policies, programmes, standards and guidelines not only on the factual care arrangements that adolescents find themselves in, nor on legal definitions of rights and responsibilities, but also on what adolescents want.


Assuntos
Cuidadores/psicologia , Crianças Órfãs/psicologia , Família , Infecções por HIV/psicologia , Apoio Social , Adolescente , Essuatíni , Família/etnologia , Infecções por HIV/etnologia , Pessoal de Saúde , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Masculino , População Rural , População Urbana
5.
Anthropol Med ; 21(2): 149-61, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25175291

RESUMO

In 2006, the Kenyan state joined the international commitment to make antiretroviral treatment free in public health institutions to people infected with HIV. Less than a decade later, treatment has reached over 60% of those who need it in Kenya. This paper, which is based on an in-depth ethnographic case study of the HIV treatment programme at Kenyatta National Hospital, conducted intermittently between 2008 and 2014, examines how HIV-positive peer mentors encourage and track adherence to treatment regimens within and beyond the clinic walls using mobile phones and computer technology. This research into the everyday practices of patient monitoring demonstrates that both surveillance and adherence are collective activities. Peer mentors provide counselling services, follow up people who stray from treatment regimens, and perform a range of other tasks related to patient management and treatment adherence. Despite peer mentors' involvement in many tasks key to encouraging optimal adherence, their role is rarely acknowledged by co-workers, hospital administrators, or public health officials. Following a biomedical paradigm, adherence at Kenyatta and in Kenya is framed by programme administrators as something individual clients must do and for which they must be held accountable. This framing simultaneously conceals the sociality of adherence and undervalues the work of peer mentors in treatment programmes.


Assuntos
Fármacos Anti-HIV/uso terapêutico , Telefone Celular , Infecções por HIV/tratamento farmacológico , Adesão à Medicação , Mentores , Antropologia Médica , Humanos , Quênia
6.
Anthropol Med ; 21(2): 107-12, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25175289

RESUMO

While social scientists often highlight the way medical technologies mediate biomedical hegemony, this special issue focuses on the creative and often unexpected ways in which medical technologies are appropriated by diverse actors in homes, clinics and communities. The authors highlight key insights from twelve ethnographic case studies conducted in North and South America, Western Europe, Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. The case studies focus on, among other issues, how sperm donors in Denmark, despite being subjugated to medical surveillance, experience the act of donating sperm as liberating; how sex workers in Indonesia turn to psychoactive painkillers to feel confident when approaching clients; why some anorexic patients in the United States resist prescribed antidepressant drugs; and how adolescent sex education workshops in Ecuador are appropriated by mothers to monitor their daughters and shame their 'lying husbands'. Hardon and Moyer conclude that studies of medical technology need to be sensitive to the micro-dynamics of power, the specificities of local markets in which medical technologies generate value, the social and intergenerational relations in which they are embedded, and their intersections with class hierarchies.


Assuntos
Antropologia Cultural , Antropologia Médica , Doença/etnologia , Doença/psicologia , Atenção à Saúde/etnologia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino
7.
Anthropol Med ; 21(2): 136-48, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25175290

RESUMO

The availability of free antiretroviral treatment in public health facilities since 2004 has contributed to the increasing biomedicalization of AIDS care in Kenya. This has been accompanied by a reduction of funding for community-based care and support organizations since the 2008 global economic crisis and a consequent donor divestment from HIV projects in Africa. This paper explores the ways that HIV interventions, including support groups, home-based care and antiretroviral treatments have shaped expectations regarding relations of care in the low-income area of Kibera in Nairobi, Kenya, over the last decade. Findings are based on 20 months of ethnographic research conducted in Nairobi between January 2011 and August 2013. By focusing on three eras of HIV treatment--pre-treatment, treatment scale-up, and post-crisis--the authors illustrate how family and community-based care have changed with shifts in funding. Many support groups that previously provided HIV care in Kibera, where the state is largely absent and family networks are thin, have been forced to cut services. Large-scale HIV treatment programmes may allow the urban poor in Nairobi to survive, but they are unlikely to thrive. Many care needs continue to go unmet in the age of treatment, and many economically marginal people who had found work in care-oriented community-based organizations now find themselves jobless or engaged in work not related to HIV.


Assuntos
Infecções por HIV/etnologia , Infecções por HIV/terapia , Apoio Social , Antropologia Médica , Cuidadores , Serviços de Saúde Comunitária , Família , Feminino , Humanos , Quênia , Masculino
8.
Ann Glob Health ; 90(1): 3, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38223654

RESUMO

The open burning of mixed wastes that contain plastics is a widespread practice across the globe, resulting in the release of gas emissions and ash residues that have toxic effects on human and environmental health. Although plastic pollution is under scrutiny as a pressing environmental concern, it is often conflated with plastic litter, and the contribution of the open burning of plastics to air, soil, and water pollution gets overlooked. Therefore, campaigns to raise awareness about plastic pollution often end up leading to increased open burning. Many countries or regions where open burning is prevalent have laws in place against the practice, but these are seldom effective. In this viewpoint, we direct attention to this critical but largely overlooked dimension of plastic pollution as an urgent global health issue. We also advocate interventions to raise awareness about the risks of open burning and emphasize the necessity of phasing out some particularly pernicious plastics in high-churn, single-use consumer applications.


Assuntos
Queima de Resíduos a Céu Aberto , Plásticos , Humanos , Plásticos/química , Plásticos/toxicidade , Saúde Global , Poluição Ambiental/prevenção & controle , Solo , Monitoramento Ambiental
9.
Cult Health Sex ; 15 Suppl 4: S453-66, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23713492

RESUMO

HIV-related counselling practices have evolved since emerging in Zambia in 1987. Whereas, initially, the goal of HIV counselling was to provide psychological support to the dying and their families, as knowledge about HIV grew, counselling objectives expanded to include behavioural change, encouraging safer sexual practices, encouraging disclosure, convincing people to test, treatment adherence and shaping HIV-positive people's sexual and reproductive choices. This paper highlights a number of key shifts in counselling practices in Zambia over the last 25 years, demonstrating the relationship between those shifts, changes in medical technology, (inter)national political will and the epidemiological maturity of the disease.


Assuntos
Aconselhamento/história , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Infecções por HIV/história , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Zâmbia
10.
Cult Health Sex ; 15 Suppl 3: S338-50, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23659582

RESUMO

Although pastoralists are a significant proportion of the rural population in many African countries, they are often underserved with regard to health-related interventions. This paper presents data on an effort to provide information about HIV prevention and treatment to Afar people living in remote, northeastern Ethiopia. Using an evidence-based approach, we worked together with the National Network of Positive Women Ethiopians to build relations with Afar communities to design and test an intervention to improve HIV awareness. In this study we observed how multi-directional, local level perceptions--of Afar regarding HIV and existing health-related interventions, of staff from organisations regarding Afar and of the researchers conducting this study regarding Afar--shape the ways in which health-related interventions are offered to Afar and how these are understood by them. While the Afar people express a desire for culturally appropriate HIV-related interventions, few such initiatives have reached them to date. Organisations working in the area often believed that Afar people did not want to accept HIV and were therefore not responsive to their interventions. We argue that the specific history of the Afar people and how this affects their understanding of HIV needs to be better understood and integrated into HIV interventions.


Assuntos
Competência Cultural , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Educação em Saúde/métodos , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde/etnologia , Serviços de Saúde Rural , Adulto , Etiópia , Feminino , Infecções por HIV/terapia , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa , População Rural
11.
Cult Health Sex ; 15 Suppl 4: S567-80, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23971911

RESUMO

Psychosocial support groups offer an important space for people living with HIV to pursue greater wellbeing as they learn how to accept and live with their HIV status. They are critical for the cultivation of responsible and adherent patients. Occasionally, support groups provide spaces where members are encouraged to discuss sexual struggles related to being HIV-positive, including sexual performance issues, sexual relationships, fertility desires and communicating with sexual partners. This paper examines an HIV-positive men's sex therapy support group at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya, where HIV-positive men access information about HIV and treatment, while getting tips on restoring sexual functioning and improving sexual gratification from medical experts, peer counsellors and fellow group members. In the group setting, members worked to rediscover and reconstruct masculinity under the guidance of a range of experts, while focusing on regaining or improving sexual prowess.


Assuntos
Soropositividade para HIV , Masculinidade , Comportamento Sexual , Adulto , Preservativos , Aconselhamento , Humanos , Quênia , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Grupos de Autoajuda
12.
Cult Health Sex ; 14 Suppl 1: S67-79, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22397696

RESUMO

Most HIV treatment guidelines advise people who test positive to disclose their status to improve adherence and garner psychosocial care and support. Similarly, advocacy groups for people living with HIV encourage disclosure as a key component of fighting self- and community-based stigma. Although there is arguably much to be gained by disclosing, there is also much at stake, including issues of individual and family honour and the possibility of living a 'normal' life. Starting with the question, Faidha gani? or 'What's the point?' this paper attempts to shed light on motives for disclosure and non-disclosure. The arguments draw from a qualitative study among young HIV-positive adults in eastern Africa and, most specifically, an in-depth case study of one couple in Zanzibar.


Assuntos
Atitude Frente a Saúde/etnologia , Características Culturais , Soropositividade para HIV/etnologia , Autorrevelação , Estigma Social , Adulto , Medo , Feminino , Infecções por HIV/etnologia , Soropositividade para HIV/psicologia , Humanos , Relações Interpessoais , Masculino , Parceiros Sexuais , Percepção Social , Apoio Social , Tanzânia , Adulto Jovem
13.
J Obstet Gynaecol Res ; 38(4): 632-8, 2012 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22414381

RESUMO

AIM: The purpose of this study was to broadly assess the level of knowledge, attitude and behaviors related to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) among unmarried female migrants in China. MATERIAL AND METHODS: This cross-sectional study was conducted and a self-administered questionnaire was designed for collecting information on SRH including 15 items for knowledge, 8 items for attitude and some items for contraception and abortion related behaviors. RESULTS: A total of 1690 unmarried female migrants were interviewed. Most of the respondents had less knowledge of SRH. Only one-third of respondents was aware of emergency contraceptives and could freely talk about SRH with their friends. Over one-third of respondents were not willing to come into contact with someone with AIDS or STDs. In this study, 10.4% participants had an unwanted pregnancy and 95% of them had an abortion. Multivariate analysis showed that having a boyfriend, duration of employment in city, knowledge on SRH and freely discussing SRH with peer were associated with having premarital sex among these unmarried female migrants. CONCLUSION: This study revealed that the unmarried female migrant was one of the most vulnerable groups concerning SRH. In some policy reforms, appropriate and cost-effective SRH services should be provided for these migrants.


Assuntos
Comportamentos Relacionados com a Saúde , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Saúde Reprodutiva , Comportamento Sexual , Migrantes , Adulto , China , Anticoncepção , Análise Custo-Benefício , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Humanos , Adulto Jovem
14.
Eur J Contracept Reprod Health Care ; 17(5): 363-72, 2012 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22839730

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: We conducted a comparative study in worksites to assess the impact of sexual health promoting interventions on contraceptive use among female rural-to-urban migrants. STUDY DESIGN: In Qingdao ten manufacturing worksites were randomly allocated to a standard package of interventions (SPI) and an intensive package of interventions (IPI). The interventions ran from July 2008 to January 2009. Cross-sectional surveys at baseline and end line assessed the sexual behaviour of young female migrants. To evaluate the impact of the interventions we assessed pre- and post-time trends. RESULTS: From the SPI group 721 (baseline) and 615 (end line) respondents were considered. Out of the IPI group we included 684 and 603 migrants. Among childless migrants, self-reported contraceptive use increased significantly after SPI and IPI (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 3.23; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.52-6.84; p < 0.01 and aOR = 5.81; 95% CI = 2.63-12.80; p < 0.001, respectively). Childless migrants older than 22 years reported a greater use after IPI than after SPI. CONCLUSION: Implementing current Chinese sexual health promotion programmes at worksites is likely to have a positive impact on migrant women working in the manufacturing industry of Qingdao. More comprehensive interventions seem to have an added value if they are well targeted to specific groups.


Assuntos
Comportamento Contraceptivo/etnologia , Emigrantes e Imigrantes/psicologia , Promoção da Saúde/métodos , Indicadores Básicos de Saúde , População Rural/estatística & dados numéricos , Comportamento Sexual/etnologia , População Urbana/estatística & dados numéricos , Local de Trabalho/estatística & dados numéricos , Adolescente , Adulto , China , Análise por Conglomerados , Comportamento Contraceptivo/estatística & dados numéricos , Estudos Transversais , Escolaridade , Emigrantes e Imigrantes/estatística & dados numéricos , Serviços de Planejamento Familiar/estatística & dados numéricos , Feminino , Humanos , Modelos Logísticos , Estudos Longitudinais , Serviços de Saúde do Trabalhador/métodos , Avaliação de Resultados em Cuidados de Saúde , Saúde Reprodutiva , Autorrelato , Inquéritos e Questionários
15.
BMJ Glob Health ; 7(5)2022 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35609919

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: As part of an effort to meet ambitious male circumcision targets in Eswatini, programme implementers have increasingly focused on young males, raising questions about informed consent. Males aged 10-19 years account for more than two-thirds of those circumcised since 2008 when internationally funded circumcision campaigns began in Eswatini. The ethical guidelines of these programmes conform to international standards, requiring that informed consent or assent be obtained prior to surgery. This article examines clients' levels of circumcision-related knowledge following the assent process, as well as how ethical guidelines were enacted in everyday practice in a setting where family dynamics and norms relating to autonomy and consensus make obtaining informed consent complex, especially when clients are incentivised with football kits and other material goods to encourage circumcision. METHODS: We conducted qualitative research in a health clinic where circumcision services for HIV prevention were being offered. Methods included focus group discussions, in-depth interviews, participant observation and informal interviews with young men undergoing circumcision in the clinic. RESULTS: Implementers paid little attention to risks, focusing more on benefits of circumcision. Incentives, usually in the form of sporting goods, increased participation, while also limiting autonomy. We also found that parental authority overpowers young males' preferences regarding circumcision. Young males' understanding of the risks associated with circumcision was poor. Most assumed HIV testing was obligatory. CONCLUSION: The drive to eliminate HIV infections in Eswatini has opened the door for interventions such as targeted circumcision campaigns. In contradiction to international ethical guidelines and the policies of the Ministry of Health and voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) implementers, we conclude that, in practce, respect for young males' rights and decision-making in the VMMC consent process is limited by complex social, economic and political realities.


Assuntos
Circuncisão Masculina , Infecções por HIV , Essuatíni , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Humanos , Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido , Masculino , Pesquisa Qualitativa
16.
Eur J Contracept Reprod Health Care ; 16(1): 26-35, 2011 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21158522

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Considerable sexual and reproductive health (SRH) challenges have been reported among rural-to-urban migrants in China. Predictors thereof are urgently needed to develop targeted interventions. STUDY DESIGN: A cross-sectional study assessed determinants of unmet need for contraception using semi-structured interviews in two cities in China: Guangzhou and Qingdao. RESULTS: Between July and September 2008, 4867 female rural-to-urban migrants aged 18-29 years participated in the study. Of these, 2264 were married or cohabiting. Among sexually-active women (n = 2513), unmet need for contraception was reported by 36.8% and 51.2% of respondents in Qingdao and Guangzhou, respectively; it was associated with being unmarried, having no children, less schooling, poor SRH knowledge, working in non-food industry, and not being covered by health insurance. A substantial proportion of unmarried migrants reported they had sexual intercourse (16.6 % in Qingdao and 21.4% in Guangzhou) contrary to current sexual standards in China. CONCLUSION: The study emphasises the importance of improving the response to the needs of rural-to-urban migrants and recommends strategies to address the unmet need for contraception. These should enhance open communication on sexuality, increase the availability of condoms, and improve health insurance coverage.


Assuntos
Anticoncepção/estatística & dados numéricos , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Avaliação das Necessidades , Migrantes/estatística & dados numéricos , Adolescente , Adulto , Distribuição de Qui-Quadrado , China , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Humanos , Comportamento Sexual/estatística & dados numéricos , Inquéritos e Questionários , Migrantes/psicologia , População Urbana/estatística & dados numéricos , Local de Trabalho , Adulto Jovem
17.
PLoS One ; 16(12): e0261408, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34937061

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: This study examined people's motivations for (repeatedly) utilizing HIV testing services during community-based testing events in urban and rural Shinyanga, Tanzania and potential implications for Universal Health Coverage (UHC). METHODS: As part of a broader multidisciplinary study on the implementation of a HIV Test and Treat model in Shinyanga Region, Tanzania, this ethnographic study focused on community-based testing campaigns organised by the implementing partner. Between April 2018 and December 2019, we conducted structured observations (24), short questionnaires (42) and in-depth interviews with HIV-positive (23) and HIV-negative clients (8). Observations focused on motivations for (re-)testing, and the counselling and testing process. Thematic analysis based on inductive and deductive coding was completed using NVivo software. RESULTS: Regular HIV testing was encouraged by counsellors. Most participants in testing campaigns were HIV-negative; 51.1% had tested more than once over their lifetimes. Testing campaigns provided an accessible way to learn one's HIV status. Motivations for repeat testing included: monitoring personal health to achieve (temporary) reassurance, having low levels of trust toward sexual partners, feeling at risk, seeking proof of (ill)-health, and acting responsibly. Repeat testers also associated testing with a desire to start treatment early to preserve a healthy-looking body, should they prove HIV positive. CONCLUSIONS: Community-based testing campaigns serve three valuable functions related to HIV prevention and treatment: 1) enable community members to check their HIV status regularly as part of a personalized prevention strategy that reinforces responsible behaviour; 2) identify recently sero-converted clients who would not otherwise be targeted; and 3) engage community with general prevention and care messaging and services. This model could be expanded to include routine management of other (chronic) diseases and provide an entry for scaling up UHC.


Assuntos
Infecções por HIV/diagnóstico , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Teste de HIV/métodos , Programas de Rastreamento/métodos , Cobertura Universal do Seguro de Saúde , Adulto , Idoso , Feminino , Infecções por HIV/tratamento farmacológico , Nível de Saúde , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Saúde Pública/métodos , Inquéritos e Questionários , Tanzânia
18.
Soc Sci Med ; 258: 113097, 2020 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32540514

RESUMO

In our field sites and clinical practice in East Africa, we regularly encounter men who have become overwhelmed by "thinking too many thoughts" and "gone crazy from confusion," brought about by the problems of life created by deepening social, economic and political precarity. Across diverse settings, many African men continue to be enmeshed in social and material obligations and expectations that position them as economic consumers and providers for those they care for and love. When these gendered obligations, expectations and fantasies are left unfulfilled, this sense of failure can be embodied to produce particular kinds of health effects. Namely, men may become plagued by troublesome and confusing thoughts, leading them in some cases to "give up on" (as our research subjects put it) pursuing work and education, to become immersed in problematic drug and alcohol use, and even to take their own lives. While these afflictions can be glossed using the language of depression, anxiety, addiction and suicide, such medicalizing frames may obscure more nuanced social, structural and affective diagnoses of what is happening to men across Africa and globally. Anthropology provides us with alternative frames through which to understand how psychological wounds are made-and healed.


Assuntos
Masculinidade , Suicídio , África , África Oriental , Humanos , Masculino
19.
Int Health ; 11(1): 36-41, 2019 01 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30137387

RESUMO

Introduction: Universal test and treat (UTT)-antiretroviral therapy (ART) for all HIV-positive individuals regardless of CD4 count-is the WHO's recommended treatment guideline. UTT has implications for health providers' workload in areas of high HIV prevalence and for understandings of ART and HIV. This article explores health providers' experiences of implementing UTT in Hhohho Region, Eswatini. Methods: Between March 2015 and October 2016, in-depth interviews were conducted with health providers implementing UTT. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and translated into English for qualitative content analysis. Results: Twenty-five providers from eight facilities were interviewed. Respondents encouraged early ART by promoting its overall health benefits, and the possibility of avoiding disclosure and HIV-related stigma in the community. Some health providers downplayed UTT's preventive benefits to avoid discouraging condom use. Respondents suggested that initiating ART immediately after testing could improve linkage-to-care, but recognized that overly hasty initiation might affect adherence. Viral load testing was seen as a potentially useful tool to monitor clients' response to ART. Conclusions: Health providers appropriated stigma to encourage early ART. This suggests an attentiveness to the social burden of HIV/AIDS, but potentially exacerbates discrimination and conflicts with efforts to reduce HIV-related stigma.


Assuntos
Antirretrovirais/uso terapêutico , Infecções por HIV/diagnóstico , Infecções por HIV/tratamento farmacológico , Pessoal de Saúde/psicologia , Programas de Rastreamento , Guias de Prática Clínica como Assunto , Relações Profissional-Paciente , Contagem de Linfócito CD4 , Revelação , Intervenção Médica Precoce , Essuatíni/epidemiologia , Feminino , Infecções por HIV/epidemiologia , Infecções por HIV/psicologia , Pessoal de Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , Masculino , Adesão à Medicação , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Estigma Social , Carga Viral , Organização Mundial da Saúde
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA