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巴西东北部的“牙虫”、贫困纹身与牙科护理冲突

"Tooth worms", poverty tattoos and dental care conflicts in Northeast Brazil.

作者信息

Nations Marilyn K, Nuto Sharmêniade de Araújo Soares

机构信息

Department of Social Medicine, Harvard University Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2002 Jan;54(2):229-44. doi: 10.1016/s0277-9536(01)00019-3.

Abstract

While medical anthropologists have studied doctor-patient clinical conflicts during the last 25-30 years, dentist-patient communication clashes have received scant attention to date. Besides structural barriers and power inequities, such conceptual differences further dehumanize dental care and lower service quality. Potential for dentist-patient discordance is greater in developing regions--such as Northeast Brazil--where there exists a wider socio-economic gap between professionals and laypersons. A critical anthropological evaluation of oral health services quality is undertaken in two rural communities in Ceará, Brazil where the PAHO-inspired Local Oral Health Inversion of Attention Program was implemented in 1994. This 6-month qualitative field study utilized ethnographic interviews with key informants, participant-observation and projective techniques to probe professionals' and patients' explanatory models (EMs) of oral health. Despite the recent expansion of services into rural regions, the authors conclude that the quality of dental care remains problematic. Patients' culturally constructed EMs of teeth rotted (estraga) by "tooth worms" (lagartas) differ substantively from dentists' model of dental decay by Streptococcus mutans. "Exploding chins" (queixo estourado), "spoiled, rotting teeth" (dente pĵdi) and "false plates" or teeth (chapas) tattoo and stigmatize the poor, reinforcing gross class inequities. Dentists' dominant discourse largely ignores lay logic, ridicules popular practices and de-legitimates, even castigates, popular healers despite their pivotal role in primary oral health care. Poor parents are not only barred from clinics but are blamed for children's rotten teeth. In sum, universal access to dental care is more a myth (even nightmare) than a reality. Dentists all too often "avert"--not "invert"--attention from poor Brazilian patients. In order to improve oral health in this setting, both "societal decay" and bacteria-laden plaque deposits must be removed.

摘要

在过去25至30年里,医学人类学家对医患临床冲突进行了研究,但迄今为止,牙医与患者之间的沟通冲突却很少受到关注。除了结构障碍和权力不平等之外,这种观念差异进一步使牙科护理失去人性化并降低了服务质量。在巴西东北部等发展中地区,医患之间出现不一致的可能性更大,因为专业人员和非专业人员之间存在更大的社会经济差距。本文对巴西塞阿拉州的两个农村社区的口腔健康服务质量进行了批判性的人类学评估,1994年在那里实施了受泛美卫生组织启发的地方口腔健康关注重点倒置项目。这项为期6个月的定性实地研究采用了对关键信息提供者的人种志访谈、参与观察和投射技术,以探究专业人员和患者对口腔健康的解释模型(EMs)。尽管最近服务已扩展到农村地区,但作者得出结论,牙科护理质量仍然存在问题。患者在文化上构建的关于牙齿被“牙虫”(lagartas)蛀坏(estraga)的解释模型与牙医关于变形链球菌导致龋齿的模型有很大不同。“下巴爆裂”(queixo estourado)、“ spoiled, rotting teeth”(dente pĵdi)以及“假牙板”或牙齿(chapas)给穷人带来污名并使其受辱,加剧了严重的阶级不平等。牙医的主导话语很大程度上忽视了外行逻辑,嘲笑流行做法,使民间治疗者的做法失去合法性,甚至加以斥责,尽管他们在初级口腔卫生保健中发挥着关键作用。贫困父母不仅被禁止进入诊所,还因孩子牙齿腐烂而受到指责。总之,普遍获得牙科护理更多是一个神话(甚至是噩梦)而非现实。牙医常常将注意力从贫穷的巴西患者身上“转移”——而非“倒置”。为了在这种情况下改善口腔健康,必须消除“社会衰败”和充满细菌的牙菌斑沉积物。

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