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不断变化的格局,不断变化的实践:在冲突后社会中协商获得昏睡病服务的机会。

Changing landscapes, changing practice: negotiating access to sleeping sickness services in a post-conflict society.

机构信息

Clinical Research Department, Faculty of Infectious & Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel St., London WC1B 7HT, UK.

Faculty of Public Health & Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK; Department of Philosophy, Sociology & Anthropology, University of Exeter, UK.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2014 Nov;120:396-404. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.03.012. Epub 2014 Mar 15.

Abstract

For several decades, control programmes for human African trypanosomiasis (HAT, or sleeping sickness) in South Sudan have been delivered almost entirely as humanitarian interventions: large, well-organised, externally-funded but short-term programmes with a strategic focus on active screening. When attempts to hand over these programmes to local partners fail, resident populations must actively seek and negotiate access to tests at hospitals via passive screening. However, little is known about the social impact of such humanitarian interventions or the consequences of withdrawal on access to and utilisation of remaining services by local populations. Based on qualitative and quantitative fieldwork in Nimule, South Sudan (2008-2010), where passive screening necessarily became the predominant strategy, this paper investigates the reasons why, among two ethnic groups (Madi returnees and Dinka displaced populations), service uptake was so much higher among the latter. HAT tests were the only form of clinical care for which displaced Dinka populations could self-refer; access to all other services was negotiated through indigenous area workers. Because of the long history of conflict, these encounters were often morally and politically fraught. An open-door policy to screening supported Dinka people to 'try' HAT tests in the normal course of treatment-seeking, thereby empowering them to use HAT services more actively. This paper argues that in a context like South Sudan, where HAT control increasingly depends upon patient-led approaches to case-detection, it is imperative to understand the cultural values and political histories associated with the practice of testing and how medical humanitarian programmes shape this landscape of care, even after they have been scaled down.

摘要

几十年来,南苏丹的人体非洲锥虫病(HAT,又称昏睡病)控制计划几乎完全作为人道主义干预措施实施:这些计划规模大、组织完善、外部资金支持但持续时间短,战略重点是主动筛查。当试图将这些计划移交给当地合作伙伴时,如果失败,当地居民必须积极寻求并通过被动筛查在医院协商获得检测机会。然而,对于这种人道主义干预的社会影响或当地居民在援助撤出后面临的服务获取和利用的后果,人们知之甚少。本文以南苏丹尼穆莱的定性和定量实地工作为基础(2008-2010 年),在那里,被动筛查必然成为主要策略,调查了在两个族群(Madi 回返者和丁卡流离失所者)中,后者服务利用率为何如此之高的原因。HAT 检测是唯一一种可以让流离失所的丁卡人自行就诊的临床护理形式;而要获得所有其他服务,则需要通过当地的土著区工作人员进行协商。由于长期的冲突,这些接触往往在道德和政治上都很复杂。对筛查的开放政策支持丁卡人在寻求治疗的过程中“尝试”进行 HAT 检测,从而使他们能够更积极地使用 HAT 服务。本文认为,在南苏丹等情况下,HAT 控制越来越依赖于患者主导的病例检测方法,因此必须了解与检测实践相关的文化价值观和政治历史,以及医疗人道主义计划如何塑造这种护理景观,即使在援助规模缩小之后也是如此。

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