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肯尼亚海岸孕妇对食土与贫血的认知

Perceptions of soil-eating and anaemia among pregnant women on the Kenyan coast.

作者信息

Geissler P W, Prince R J, Levene M, Poda C, Beckerleg S E, Mutemi W, Shulman C E

机构信息

Danish Bilharziasis Laboratory, Copenhagen.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 1999 Apr;48(8):1069-79. doi: 10.1016/s0277-9536(98)00409-2.

Abstract

After a clinical study at Kilifi District hospital had shown a high prevalence of geophagy among pregnant women, and a strong association of geophagy, anaemia and iron depletion, 52 pregnant women from the same hospital, and 4 traditional healers from the surroundings of Kilifi in Kenya were interviewed on the topic of soil-eating and its perceived causes and consequences. The findings were substantiated by results from an earlier anthropological study on maternal health and anaemia in the same study area. Most of the pregnant women (73%) ate soil regularly. They mainly ate the soil from walls of houses, and their estimated median daily ingestion was 41.5 g. They described soil-eating as a predominantly female practice with strong relations to fertility and reproduction. They made associations between soil-eating, the condition of the blood and certain bodily states: pregnancy, lack of blood (upungufu wa damu), an illness called safura involving "weak" blood, and worms (minyolo). The relationships the women described between soil-eating and illness resemble to some extent the causalities explored in biomedical research on soil-eating, anaemia and intestinal worm infections. However the women did not conceptualise the issue in terms of the single causal links characteristic of most scientific thought. Instead, they acknowledged the existence of multiple links between phenomena which they observed in their own and other women's bodies. The women's ideas about soil-eating and their bodies shows the significance of both social and cultural context on the ways in which women derive knowledge from, and make sense of their bodily states. The cultural associations of soil-eating with blood, fertility and femininity exist alongside knowledge of its links to illness. Our findings show that soil-eating is more than just a physiologically induced behaviour; it is a rich cultural practice.

摘要

在基利菲区医院进行的一项临床研究表明,孕妇中食土现象极为普遍,且食土与贫血和铁缺乏之间存在紧密关联。之后,我们对同一家医院的52名孕妇以及肯尼亚基利菲周边地区的4名传统治疗师进行了访谈,话题围绕食土及其感知到的成因和后果。同一研究区域内早期一项关于孕产妇健康和贫血的人类学研究结果证实了这些发现。大多数孕妇(73%)有规律地食用泥土。她们主要食用房屋墙壁上的泥土,估计每日平均摄入量为41.5克。她们将食土描述为一种主要由女性进行的行为,与生育和繁殖密切相关。她们将食土与血液状况和某些身体状态联系起来:怀孕、血虚(upungufu wa damu)、一种名为safura的涉及“虚弱”血液的疾病以及寄生虫(minyolo)。这些女性所描述的食土与疾病之间的关系,在一定程度上类似于关于食土、贫血和肠道寄生虫感染的生物医学研究中所探讨的因果关系。然而,这些女性并非按照大多数科学思维所特有的单一因果联系来理解这个问题。相反,她们承认在自己和其他女性身体中观察到的现象之间存在多重联系。这些女性关于食土及其身体的观念表明,社会和文化背景对于女性从自身身体状态中获取知识并理解这些状态的方式具有重要意义。食土与血液、生育和女性特质之间的文化关联,与食土和疾病之间的关联知识并存。我们的研究结果表明,食土不仅仅是一种生理诱发行为;它是一种丰富的文化实践。

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