Literature DB >> 27328175

Normalizing diabetes in Delhi: a qualitative study of health and health care.

Emily Mendenhall1, H Stowe McMurry1, Roopa Shivashankar2, K M Venkat Narayan3, Nikhil Tandon4, Dorairaj Prabhakaran2.   

Abstract

The Type 2 diabetes epidemic in India poses challenges to the health system. Yet little is known about how urban Indians view treatment and self-care. Such views are important within the pluralistic healthcare landscape of India, bringing together allopathic and non-allopathic (or traditional) paradigms and practices. We used in-depth qualitative interviews to examine how people living with diabetes in India selectively engage with allopathic and non-allopathic Indian care paradigms. We propose a 'discourse marketplace' model that demonstrates competing ways in which people frame diabetes care-seeking in India's medical pluralism, which includes allopathic and traditional systems of care. Four major domains emerged from grounded theory analysis: (1) normalization of diabetes in social interactions; (2) stigma; (3) stress; and (4) decision-making with regard to diabetes treatment. We found that participants selectively engaged with aspects of allopathic and non-allopathic Indian illness paradigms to build personalized illness meanings and care plans that served psychological, physical, and social needs. Participants constructed illness narratives that emphasized the social-communal experience of diabetes and, as a result, reported less stigma and stress due to diabetes. These data suggest that the pro-social construction of diabetes in India is both helpful and harmful for patients - it provides psychological comfort, but also lessens the impetus for prevention and self-care. Clarifying the social constructions of diabetes and chronic disease in India and other medically pluralistic contexts is a crucial first step to designing locally situated treatment schemes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  India; Type 2 diabetes; medical anthropology; morality; self-care; stigma

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27328175      PMCID: PMC5542062          DOI: 10.1080/13648470.2016.1184010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anthropol Med        ISSN: 1364-8470


  34 in total

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