Gove S, Pelto G H
World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
Med Anthropol. 1994 May;15(4):409-24. doi: 10.1080/01459740.1994.9966102.
Focused Ethnographic Studies (FESs), developed and sponsored by the World Health Organization (WHO) Programme for the Control of Acute Respiratory Infections (ARI), have facilitated ethnographic research dedicated to determining key household behaviors and understandings surrounding respiratory infections--particularly pneumonia--in children. The FES design emphasizes anthropological theory and methods while limiting the scope and duration of fieldwork to a specific "program-relevant" research problem. Findings from FES studies provide evidence of the rich vocabulary of ARI-related signs and concepts, and the interplay of structural and cultural factors that affect care-seeking for children with pneumonia.
由世界卫生组织(WHO)急性呼吸道感染控制规划(ARI)开发并资助的重点人种志研究(FES),推动了人种志研究,致力于确定围绕儿童呼吸道感染——尤其是肺炎——的关键家庭行为和认知。FES设计强调人类学理论和方法,同时将实地调查的范围和持续时间限制在一个特定的“与规划相关”的研究问题上。FES研究的结果提供了与ARI相关的症状和概念的丰富词汇,以及影响肺炎患儿就医行为的结构和文化因素相互作用的证据。