Literature DB >> 24077802

Volunteerism or Labor Exploitation? Harnessing the Volunteer Spirit to Sustain AIDS Treatment Programs in Urban Ethiopia.

Kenneth Maes1.   

Abstract

Based on ethnographic research in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, this paper describes NGO efforts to encourage AIDS care volunteers to eschew material returns for their labor and instead reflect on the goodness of sacrificing to promote the survival of people living with HIV/AIDS. Consensus analysis of motivational survey data collected from a sample of AIDS care volunteers (n=110) suggests that they strongly share a sacrificial and prosocial motivational model. These results may be explained by several factors, including the efforts of the organizations to shape volunteers' motivations, the self-selection of volunteers, positive reinforcement in seeing one's patients become healthy, and social desirability bias. In-depth interviews examining the motivations and behaviors of volunteers reveal a more complicated picture: even ostensibly devoted and altruistic volunteers strongly question their service commitments. The complexity and ambivalence of volunteers' motivations reflect the profound uncertainty that they face in achieving improved socioeconomic status for themselves and their families amid widespread unemployment and sharply rising food prices. Their desires for economic opportunities explain why local NGOs exert so much effort to shape and sustain-and yet fail to completely control-their motivations. This recasts economically-insecure volunteers' consent to donate their labor as a process of negotiation with their organizers. Future research should explore how models of health care volunteerism and volunteer motivations are shaped by individual and collective experiences in political-economic context.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AIDS care; Ethiopia; cultural consensus; motivation; volunteerism

Year:  2012        PMID: 24077802      PMCID: PMC3783341          DOI: 10.17730/humo.71.1.axm39467485m22w4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Organ        ISSN: 0018-7259


  21 in total

1.  What motivates lay volunteers in high burden but resource-limited tuberculosis control programmes? Perceptions from the Northern Cape province, South Africa.

Authors:  S Kironde; S Klaasen
Journal:  Int J Tuberc Lung Dis       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 2.373

2.  Volunteer home-based HIV/AIDS care and food crisis in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: sustainability in the face of chronic food insecurity.

Authors:  Kenneth C Maes; Selamawit Shifferaw; Craig Hadley; Fikru Tesfaye
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2010-05-03       Impact factor: 3.344

3.  What motivates people to volunteer? the case of volunteer AIDS caregivers in faith-based organizations in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Authors:  Olagoke Akintola
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2010-05-28       Impact factor: 3.344

4.  Examining health-care volunteerism in a food- and financially-insecure world.

Authors:  Kenneth Maes
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2010-11-01       Impact factor: 9.408

5.  Home-based care for people living with AIDS in Zimbabwe: voluntary caregivers' motivations and concerns.

Authors:  Alexander Rödlach
Journal:  Afr J AIDS Res       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 1.300

6.  Doing well by doing good. The relationship between formal volunteering and self-reported health and happiness.

Authors:  Francesca Borgonovi
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2008-03-05       Impact factor: 4.634

7.  Cultural consonance and psychological distress: examining the associations in multiple cultural domains.

Authors:  William W Dressler; Mauro C Balieiro; Rosane P Ribeiro; José Ernesto Dos Santos
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2007-06

8.  "I was not invited to be a [CHW] ... I asked to be one": motives for community mobilization among women community health workers in Mexico.

Authors:  J Ramirez-Valles
Journal:  Health Educ Behav       Date:  2001-04

9.  Culture, status and context in community health worker pay: pitfalls and opportunities for policy research. A commentary on Glenton et al. (2010).

Authors:  Kenneth C Maes; Brandon A Kohrt; Svea Closser
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2010-07-29       Impact factor: 4.634

10.  Medicines without doctors: why the Global Fund must fund salaries of health workers to expand AIDS treatment.

Authors:  Gorik Ooms; Wim Van Damme; Marleen Temmerman
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 11.069

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  18 in total

1.  A network study exploring factors that promote or erode interaction among diverse community health workers in rural Ethiopia.

Authors:  Michelle M Dynes; Craig Hadley; Rob Stephenson; Lynn M Sibley
Journal:  Health Policy Plan       Date:  2014-10-13       Impact factor: 3.344

2.  Listening to community health workers: how ethnographic research can inform positive relationships among community health workers, health institutions, and communities.

Authors:  Kenneth Maes; Svea Closser; Ippolytos Kalofonos
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2014-03-13       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Local in Practice: Professional Distinctions in Angolan Development Work.

Authors:  Rebecca Warne Peters
Journal:  Am Anthropol       Date:  2016-07-19

4.  Measuring and Valuing Informal Care for Economic Evaluation of HIV/AIDS Interventions: Methods and Application in Malawi.

Authors:  Levison S Chiwaula; Paul Revill; Deborah Ford; Misheck Nkhata; Travor Mabugu; James Hakim; Cissy Kityo; Adrienne K Chan; Fabian Cataldo; Diana Gibb; Bernard van den Berg
Journal:  Value Health Reg Issues       Date:  2016-09-16

5.  Refusing the Development NGO? Departure, Dismissal, and Misrecognition in Angolan Development Interventions.

Authors:  Rebecca Warne Peters
Journal:  Anthropol Q       Date:  2019

6.  "Someone like us": delivering maternal mental health through peers in two South Asian contexts.

Authors:  Daisy Singla; Anisha Lazarus; Najia Atif; Siham Sikander; Urvita Bhatia; Ikhlaq Ahmad; Anum Nisar; Sonia Khan; Daniela Fuhr; Vikram Patel; Atif Rahman
Journal:  J Affect Disord       Date:  2014-07-18       Impact factor: 4.839

7.  Becoming and remaining community health workers: perspectives from Ethiopia and Mozambique.

Authors:  Kenneth Maes; Ippolytos Kalofonos
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2013-03-28       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 8.  Sources of community health worker motivation: a qualitative study in Morogoro Region, Tanzania.

Authors:  Jesse A Greenspan; Shannon A McMahon; Joy J Chebet; Maurus Mpunga; David P Urassa; Peter J Winch
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2013-10-10

9.  'Deep down in their heart, they wish they could be given some incentives': a qualitative study on the changing roles and relations of care among home-based caregivers in Zambia.

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

10.  Motivations for entering and remaining in volunteer service: findings from a mixed-method survey among HIV caregivers in Zambia.

Authors:  Stephanie M Topp; Jessica E Price; Tina Nanyangwe-Moyo; Drosin M Mulenga; Mardieh L Dennis; Mathew M Ngunga
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2015-09-02
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