Literature DB >> 19910097

Targeted doctors, missing patients: obstetric health services and sectarian conflict in northern Pakistan.

Emma Varley1.   

Abstract

The spectre of exclusionary medical service provision, restricted clinic access and physician targeting in sectarian-divided Iraq underscores the crucial and timely need for qualitative research into the inter-relationship between conflict, identity and health. In response, this paper provides a critical ethnography of obstetric service provision and patient access during Shia-Sunni hostilities in Gilgit Town, capital of Pakistan's Northern Areas (2005). I analyse how services were embedded in and constrained by sectarian affiliation in ways that detrimentally impacted Sunni women patients and hospital staff, resulting in profoundly diminished clinic access, reduced physician coverage and a higher observed incidence of maternal morbidity and mortality. The paper first situates obstetric medicine at the interstices of contested sectarian terrain and competing historical projects of sectarian identity. Gilgiti Sunnis' high clinical reliance is argued to be a response to and consequence of, inter-sectarian dissonance and the ascendance of biomedicine during three decades of regional development. In 2005, conflict-incurred service deprivations and the enactment and strategic use of sectarian identity in clinical settings were associated with differential treatment and patient-perceived adverse health outcomes, leading Sunnis to generate alternative sect-specific health services. Obstetric morbidity and mortality during sectarian conflict are analyzed as distinctive manifestations of the wide range of direct harms routinely associated with violence and political strife.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19910097     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.09.028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  8 in total

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Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2016-06

2.  Are community midwives addressing the inequities in access to skilled birth attendance in Punjab, Pakistan? Gender, class and social exclusion.

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3.  Measurement of attacks and interferences with health care in conflict: validation of an incident reporting tool for attacks on and interferences with health care in eastern Burma.

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Journal:  Confl Health       Date:  2014-11-03       Impact factor: 2.723

Review 4.  Understanding processes of risk and protection that shape the sexual and reproductive health of young women affected by conflict: the price of protection.

Authors:  Aisha Hutchinson; Philippa Waterhouse; Jane March-McDonald; Sarah Neal; Roger Ingham
Journal:  Confl Health       Date:  2017-08-17       Impact factor: 2.723

5.  Persistent barriers to the use of maternal, newborn and child health services in Garissa sub-county, Kenya: a qualitative study.

Authors:  Isaac Kisiangani; Mohamed Elmi; Pauline Bakibinga; Shukri F Mohamed; Lyagamula Kisia; Peter M Kibe; Peter Otieno; Naïm Afeich; Amina Abdullahi Nyaga; Ngugi Njoroge; Rumana Noor; Abdhalah Kasiira Ziraba
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2020-05-07       Impact factor: 3.007

6.  Associations Between Acute Conflict and Maternal Care Usage in Egypt: An Uncontrolled Before-and-After Study Using Demographic and Health Survey Data.

Authors:  Saji S Gopalan; Richard J Silverwood; Omar Salman; Natasha Howard
Journal:  Int J Health Policy Manag       Date:  2019-03-01

7.  Multi-faceted identities and interactions in mixed health teams.

Authors:  Daniella Arieli; Miriam J Hirschfeld
Journal:  Isr J Health Policy Res       Date:  2016-07-19

8.  Mothers employed in paid work and their predictors for home delivery in Pakistan.

Authors:  Sara Rizvi Jafree; Rubeena Zakar; Mudasir Mustafa; Florian Fischer
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2018-08-03       Impact factor: 3.007

  8 in total

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