Literature DB >> 23674324

"Love isn't there in your stomach": a moral economy of medical citizenship among Nicaraguan community health workers.

Alex M Nading1.   

Abstract

Drawing on participant-observation in Nicaraguan dengue prevention campaigns and a series of semistructured interviews with Nicaraguan health ministry personnel, this article shows how community health workers (CHWs) balanced two kinds of "medical citizenship." In some situations, CHWs acted as professional monitors and models of hygienic behavior. At other times, CHWs acted as compassionate advocates for their poor neighbors. In 2008, Nicaragua's Sandinista government moved to end a long-standing policy of paying CHWs, recasting them as citizen-volunteers in a "popular struggle" against dengue. Although CHWs approved of the revival of grassroots advocacy, they were hostile to the elimination of compensation. Framing this ambivalence as part of CHWs' desire to serve as "brokers" between the poor and the state, I suggest that attention to medical citizenship provides insight into the sometimes contradictory ways in which CHWs engage the participatory health policies now taking hold in Latin America and elsewhere.
© 2013 by the American Anthropological Association.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23674324     DOI: 10.1111/maq.12017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  6 in total

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Authors:  Fabian Cataldo; Karina Kielmann; Tara Kielmann; Gitau Mburu; Maurice Musheke
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2015-01-28       Impact factor: 2.655

2.  Securing a Right to Health: "Integration Villages" and Medical Citizenship of Roma People in France.

Authors:  Daniel Manson
Journal:  Health Hum Rights       Date:  2017-12

3.  She knows that she will not come back: tracing patients and new thresholds of collective surveillance in PMTCT Option B.

Authors:  Fabian Cataldo; Janet Seeley; Misheck J Nkhata; Zivai Mupambireyi; Edward Tumwesige; Diana M Gibb
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2018-02-01       Impact factor: 2.655

4.  Who bears the cost of 'informal mhealth'? Health-workers' mobile phone practices and associated political-moral economies of care in Ghana and Malawi.

Authors:  Kate Hampshire; Gina Porter; Simon Mariwah; Alister Munthali; Elsbeth Robson; Samuel Asiedu Owusu; Albert Abane; James Milner
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2016-07-31       Impact factor: 3.344

5.  Informal mhealth at scale in Africa: Opportunities and challenges.

Authors:  Kate Hampshire; Tawonga Mwase-Vuma; Kassahun Alemu; Albert Abane; Alister Munthali; Tadesse Awoke; Simon Mariwah; Elita Chamdimba; Samuel Asiedu Owusu; Elsbeth Robson; Michele Castelli; Ziv Shkedy; Nicholas Shawa; Jane Abel; Adetayo Kasim
Journal:  World Dev       Date:  2021-04

6.  Village health workers as health diplomats: negotiating health and study participation in a malaria elimination trial in The Gambia.

Authors:  Yoriko Masunaga; Joan Muela Ribera; Fatou Jaiteh; Daniel H de Vries; Koen Peeters Grietens
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-01-11       Impact factor: 2.655

  6 in total

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