| Literature DB >> 25859917 |
Thirusha Naidu1, Yvonne Sliep.
Abstract
In traditional Zulu communities, caregiving is rooted in compassionate and hardworking personal identity precepts and the traditional identity expectations of women. Home-based-care volunteerism in the community represents the performance of this identity. Data from a series of interviews with 15 home-based care volunteers (HBCVs), in a rural community in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa, is used to illustrate how HBCVs promote the notion of women as paid home-based caregivers, with a recognised space in the care and support system regarding HIV and AIDS. Home-based-care volunteering also represents the attempt by women to be seen, heard and recognised in the hope that it will lead to self-improvement and the improvement of their families. Volunteer motivations vary from altruism, to volunteering as a means to be recognised and increasing the chances of self-improvement. We propose that home-based-care volunteering may be viewed as a form of agency in response to a lack of recognition, support and acknowledgement for AIDS caregivers and their patients. The continued lack of support for HBCVs over a long period undermines the work and the basis of the HBCVs' identity or the aspects of identity on which the motivation for the work is based.Entities:
Keywords: community care; cultural aspects; gender; narrative research; poverty; research methods; women
Year: 2012 PMID: 25859917 DOI: 10.2989/16085906.2012.698082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Afr J AIDS Res ISSN: 1608-5906 Impact factor: 1.300