Literature DB >> 28670971

International clinical volunteering in Tanzania: A postcolonial analysis of a Global Health business.

Noelle Sullivan1.   

Abstract

This article traces how scarcities characteristic of health systems in low-income countries (LICs), and increasing popular interest in Global Health, have inadvertently contributed to the popularisation of a specific Global Health business: international clinical volunteering through private volunteer placement organisations (VPOs). VPOs market neglected health facilities as sites where foreigners can 'make a difference', regardless of their skill set. Drawing on online investigation and ethnographic research in Tanzania over four field seasons from 2011 to 2015, including qualitative interviews with 41 foreign volunteers and 90 Tanzanian health workers, this article offers a postcolonial analysis of VPO marketing and volunteer action in health facilities of LICs. Two prevalent postcolonial racialised tropes inform both VPO marketing and foreign volunteers' discourses and practices in Tanzania. The first trope discounts Tanzanian expertise in order to envision volunteers in expert roles despite lacking training, expertise, or contextual knowledge. The second trope envisions Tanzanian patients as so impoverished that insufficiently trained volunteer help is 'better than nothing at all'. These two postcolonial racialised tropes inform the conceptual work undertaken by VPO marketing schemes and foreign volunteers in order to remake Tanzanian health professionals and patients into appropriate and justifiable sites for foreign volunteer intervention.

Entities:  

Keywords:  International volunteering; Tanzania; ethics; global health; medical education

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28670971     DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2017.1346695

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Public Health        ISSN: 1744-1692


  5 in total

1.  Global Health Partnerships and the Brocher Declaration: Principles for Ethical Short-Term Engagements in Global Health.

Authors:  Shailendra Prasad; Myron Aldrink; Bruce Compton; Judy Lasker; Peter Donkor; David Weakliam; Virginia Rowthorn; Efua Mantey; Keith Martin; Francis Omaswa; Habib Benzian; Erwin Clagua-Guerra; Emilly Maractho; Kwame Agyire-Tettey; Nigel Crisp; Ramaswami Balasubramaniam
Journal:  Ann Glob Health       Date:  2022-05-17       Impact factor: 3.640

2.  A Comprehensive Framework for International Medical Programs: A 2017 consensus statement from the American College of Academic International Medicine.

Authors:  Manish Garg; Gregory L Peck; Bonnie Arquilla; Andrew C Miller; Sari E Soghoian; Harry L Anderson Iii; Christina Bloem; Michael S Firstenberg; Sagar C Galwankar; Weidun Alan Guo; Ricardo Izurieta; Elizabeth Krebs; Bhakti Hansoti; Sudip Nanda; Chinenye O Nwachuku; Benedict Nwomeh; Lorenzo Paladino; Thomas J Papadimos; Richard P Sharpe; Mamta Swaroop; Stanislaw P Stawicki
Journal:  Int J Crit Illn Inj Sci       Date:  2017 Oct-Dec

Review 3.  Healthy, safe and effective international medical student electives: a systematic review and recommendations for program coordinators.

Authors:  D Ashley Watson; Nicholas Cooling; Ian J Woolley
Journal:  Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines       Date:  2019-04-03

4.  Using a Health Equity Lens to Evaluate Short-Term Experiences in Global Health (STEGH).

Authors:  Vivian W L Tsang; Lawrence Loh
Journal:  Ann Glob Health       Date:  2020-11-11       Impact factor: 2.462

Review 5.  Guidelines for responsible short-term global health activities: developing common principles.

Authors:  Judith N Lasker; Myron Aldrink; Ramaswami Balasubramaniam; Paul Caldron; Bruce Compton; Jessica Evert; Lawrence C Loh; Shailendra Prasad; Shira Siegel
Journal:  Global Health       Date:  2018-02-07       Impact factor: 4.185

  5 in total

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