Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1830 E Monument St Rm 450-B, Baltimore, MD, 21287, USA.
Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, 1 Brookings Drive, Campus Box 1114, St. Louis, MO, 63130, USA.
Int J Equity Health. 2017 Mar 14;16(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s12939-017-0547-5.
Indigenous populations in Latin America have worse health outcomes than their nonindigenous counterparts. Differences in access to and use of biomedical resources may explain some of the observed disparities. Efforts to address these differences could be aided in part by better understanding the socio-medical contexts in which they occur.
We performed a qualitative analysis of field notes collected during a 2008 program evaluation of a health post in a rural Maya village in Sololá Department, Guatemala. Forty-one interviews were conducted among a community-based convenience sample of adult men and women. Interviews focused on experiences, perceptions, and behaviors related to the local biomedical and ethnomedical health care resources.
Penetrance of the local health post was high, with most (90%) of respondents having accessed it within the prior five years. The prevailing attitude toward the health post was positive. We identified facilitators and barriers to health post use that corresponded with three thematic areas: clinic operations, visits and consultations, and medical resources. Proximity to the home, free consultations and medications, and social support services were among the most commonly cited facilitators. Barriers included limited clinic hours, medication stock-outs, provision of care that did not meet patient expectations, and unavailability of diagnostic tests.
In a rural Maya community in Guatemala, operational and quality-based factors, independent of sociocultural considerations, informed the perception of and decision to access biomedical resources. Interventions that address these factors may increase health care utilization and alleviate some of the health disparities that accompany indigeneity in Guatemala and similar contexts.
拉丁美洲的土著居民的健康状况比非土著居民差。在获得和使用生物医学资源方面的差异可能解释了部分观察到的差异。为了解决这些差异,可以通过更好地了解它们发生的社会医学背景来部分地帮助这些努力。
我们对 2008 年在危地马拉索洛拉省一个农村玛雅村的一个卫生所进行的方案评估中收集的实地记录进行了定性分析。在一个以社区为基础的成年男女便利样本中进行了 41 次访谈。访谈重点是与当地生物医学和民族医学保健资源相关的经验、看法和行为。
当地卫生所的渗透率很高,大多数(90%)受访者在过去五年内曾访问过该卫生所。对卫生所的普遍态度是积极的。我们确定了使用卫生所的促进因素和障碍,这些因素与三个主题领域相对应:诊所运营、就诊和咨询、医疗资源。离家近、免费咨询和药物、社会支持服务是最常被提及的促进因素。障碍包括诊所营业时间有限、药物短缺、提供的护理不符合患者期望、以及缺乏诊断测试。
在危地马拉的一个农村玛雅社区中,独立于社会文化因素的运营和基于质量的因素影响了对生物医学资源的看法和决定是否使用这些资源。解决这些因素的干预措施可能会增加医疗保健的利用,并减轻与危地马拉和类似背景下的土著身份相关的一些健康差距。