Literature DB >> 26778613

Transnational connections of health professionals: medicoscapes and assisted reproduction in Ghana and Uganda.

Viola Hörbst1, Trudie Gerrits2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Based on our comparative fieldwork in two private fertility clinics in Accra (Ghana) and Kampala (Uganda), we explore the transnational mobility of providers involved in assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) and analyze how resulting transnational networks influence the realization and appropriation of these therapeutic treatments. By exploring these case studies from developing countries, this article intends to contribute to the field of studies that examine the diversification and complexity of migration and health care.
DESIGN: We first summarize the dynamics affecting the health-care systems in Ghana and Uganda over the last decades. Then, we describe the transnational mobility engaged in the two clinics. Through the case studies, we highlight how ARTs are realized and appropriated in the two receiving countries, and the role transnational contacts play within the negotiations of medical ethos and financial interests. By using the concept of medicoscapes, we analyze the worldwide connections between ART providers, the institutions they work in, their medical practices, artifacts, and their regimes of medical knowledge. RESULT: Transnational professional contacts have been essential to the setup of both clinics offering ARTs in Ghana and Uganda. These contacts developed along colonial and post-colonial links, integrating also south-south relationship. The clinics' directors act as entrepreneurs and creative decision-makers who capitalize on their transnational professional network. The case studies show the diverse transnational entanglements in both clinics and demonstrate the frictions between the doctors' entrepreneurial interests, medical concerns and cultural values.
CONCLUSION: The transnational professional contacts expose both clinics to varying practices and debates, and make them into sites for negotiating distinct clinical practices. They provoke frictions between entrepreneurial interests and medical concerns including cultural values. In current medicoscapes, in a situation of full absence of any form of financial support and of any national ART regulation in Ghana and Uganda, clinic directors are in the position to apply those practices that fit their interests and local circumstances best.

Keywords:  ARTs; Ghana; IVF; Infertility; Uganda; biomedicine; embryology; entrepreneurship; ethics; health providers; medicoscapes; mobility; private health care; sub-Saharan Africa; technology; transnational networks

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26778613     DOI: 10.1080/13557858.2015.1105184

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ethn Health        ISSN: 1355-7858            Impact factor:   2.772


  9 in total

1.  The fertile grounds of reproductive activism in The Gambia: A qualitative study of local key stakeholders' understandings and heterogeneous actions related to infertility.

Authors:  Susan Dierickx; Gily Coene; Megan Evans; Julie Balen; Chia Longman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-12-04       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 2.  IVF and other ART in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic landscape analysis.

Authors:  Tendai M Chiware; Nathalie Vermeulen; Karel Blondeel; Roy Farquharson; James Kiarie; Kersti Lundin; Thabo Christopher Matsaseng; Willem Ombelet; Igor Toskin
Journal:  Hum Reprod Update       Date:  2021-02-19       Impact factor: 15.610

3.  'God helps those who help themselves'… religion and Assisted Reproductive Technology usage amongst urban Ghanaians.

Authors:  Rosemond Akpene Hiadzi; Isaac Mensah Boafo; Peace Mamle Tetteh
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-12-09       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 4.  Reproductive travel to, from and within sub-Saharan Africa: A scoping review.

Authors:  Tessa Moll; Trudie Gerrits; Karin Hammarberg; Lenore Manderson; Andrea Whittaker
Journal:  Reprod Biomed Soc Online       Date:  2022-02-05

5.  Men and infertility in The Gambia: Limited biomedical knowledge and awareness discourage male involvement and exacerbate gender-based impacts of infertility.

Authors:  Susan Dierickx; Kelvin Onyango Oruko; Ed Clarke; Sainey Ceesay; Allan Pacey; Julie Balen
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-11-29       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Access to infertility care services towards Universal Health Coverage is a right and not an option.

Authors:  Rachid Bezad; Sanae El Omrani; Amal Benbella; Bouchra Assarag
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-08-25       Impact factor: 2.908

7.  Availability of services for the diagnosis and treatment of infertility in The Gambia`s public and private health facilities: a cross-sectional survey.

Authors:  Anna Afferri; Haddijatou Allen; Susan Dierickx; Mustapha Bittaye; Musa Marena; Allan Pacey; Julie Balen
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-09-07       Impact factor: 2.908

8.  Assisted reproductive technologies in Ghana: transnational undertakings, local practices and 'more affordable' IVF.

Authors:  Trudie Gerrits
Journal:  Reprod Biomed Soc Online       Date:  2016-06-21

9.  'You cannot do IVF in Africa as in Europe': the making of IVF in Mali and Uganda.

Authors:  Viola Hörbst
Journal:  Reprod Biomed Soc Online       Date:  2016-10-05
  9 in total

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