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1.
Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ; 28(4): 1347-1360, 2023 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36856902

ABSTRACT

Medical-school applicants learn from many sources that they must stand out to fit in. Many construct self-presentations intended to appeal to medical-school admissions committees from the raw materials of work and volunteer experiences, in order to demonstrate that they will succeed in a demanding profession to which access is tightly controlled. Borrowing from the field of architecture the lens of construction ecology, which considers buildings in relation to the global effects of the resources required for their construction, we reframe medical-school admissions as a social phenomenon that has far-reaching harmful unintended consequences, not just for medicine but for the broader world. Illustrating with discussion of three common pathways to experiences that applicants widely believe will help them gain admission, we describe how the construction ecology of medical school admissions can recast privilege as merit, reinforce colonizing narratives, and lead to exploitation of people who are already disadvantaged.


Subject(s)
School Admission Criteria , Schools, Medical , Humans
2.
Med Anthropol Q ; 36(4): 433-441, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36433774

ABSTRACT

This statement summarizes key findings from anthropological and related scholarship on the harmful consequences of inadequate abortion access, leading the Society for Medical Anthropology to register profound concern about the recent Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson. After circulation to SMA members for input, a finalized version passed a membership vote by an overwhelming margin. This statement complements one produced by the Council for Anthropology and Reproduction, available here.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Induced , Women's Health , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , United States , Anthropology, Medical , Supreme Court Decisions , Reproduction
3.
Soc Sci Med ; 301: 114934, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35378429

ABSTRACT

In this critical ethnographic study, we examined women's end of life experiences in Malawi, one of the few countries in the world with a national palliative care policy. Specifically, we explored how women's and their caregivers' experiences were shaped by family and community care, and material needs. Interviews and observations with female clients of a non-governmental organization in rural Central Malawi, and with their caregivers, revealed that community-level support was both precarious and critical. We found three main themes: (1) I stay with them well, (2) we eat together, and (3) everyone is for themselves. The analysis illustrates the centrality of community care, social in/exclusion, and availability of stable food, shelter, medical, and caregiving resources on health and wellbeing at end of life. We provide recommendations to strengthen community care opportunities and women's resource bases.


Subject(s)
Rural Population , Women's Health , Death , Female , Humans , Malawi , Palliative Care
4.
Glob Public Health ; 15(7): 1062-1072, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32083982

ABSTRACT

Gender inequality in the form of gender-based violence manifests throughout the course of women's lives but has a particularly unique impact at end of life. We sampled 26 patients and 14 caregivers for this qualitative critical ethnographic study. The study purpose was to describe the lived experience of female palliative care patients in rural Malawi and their caregivers. The specific aims were to (i) analyse physical, spiritual and mental health needs and (ii) guide best healthcare practice. The study was informed by feminist epistemology, which drew us to an analysis focused on how gender inequality and gender-based violence affect the care of those with terminal illness. In this article, based on our findings, we demonstrate how gender inequality manifests through the intersecting gendered vulnerabilities of patients and their caregivers in rural Malawi. The findings specifically provide insight into the gendered nature of care work and how the gendered life trajectories of both patients and caregivers intersect to impact the health and well-being of both groups. Our findings have implications on how palliative care can be scaled up in rural Malawi in support of women who are experiencing intimate partner violence at end of life, and the caregivers responsible for their well-being.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Palliative Care , Caregivers/psychology , Caregivers/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Intimate Partner Violence , Malawi , Patients/psychology , Patients/statistics & numerical data , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data
5.
AMA J Ethics ; 20(1): 278-287, 2018 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29542438

ABSTRACT

Maternal and neonatal mortality statistics foreground some possible causes of death at the expense of others. Political place (nation, state) and place of birth (hospital, home) are integral to these statistics; respect for women as persons is not. Using case examples from Malawi and the United States, I argue that the focus on place embedded in these indicators can legitimate coercive approaches to childbirth. Qualitative assessments in both cases reveal that respectful care, while not represented in current indicators, is critical for the health of women and newborns. Perinatal outcomes measures thus must be rethought to ensure ethical and safe maternity care. This rethinking will require new questions and new methods.


Subject(s)
Delivery, Obstetric/standards , Infant Mortality , Maternal Mortality , Perinatal Care/standards , Physician-Patient Relations/ethics , Quality Indicators, Health Care/ethics , Women's Rights , Cause of Death , Coercion , Delivery, Obstetric/statistics & numerical data , Ethics, Medical , Ethnicity , Female , Home Childbirth , Humans , Infant , Infant Health , Malawi/epidemiology , Maternal Health , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Politics , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research , Respect , United States/epidemiology
6.
Med Educ ; 50(3): 300-10, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26896015

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Empathy in doctor-patient relationships is a familiar topic for medical scholars and a crucial goal for medical educators. Nonetheless, there are persistent disagreements in the research literature concerning how best to evaluate empathy among physicians, and whether empathy declines or increases across medical education. Some researchers have argued that the instruments used to study 'empathy' may not measure anything meaningful to clinical practice or patient satisfaction. METHODS: We performed a systematic review to learn how empathy is conceptualised in medical education research. We examined how researchers define the central construct of empathy and what they choose to measure, and investigated how well definitions and operationalisations match. RESULTS: Among the 109 studies that met our search criteria, 20% failed to define the central construct of empathy at all and only 13% used an operationalisation that was well matched to the definition provided. The majority of studies were characterised by internal inconsistencies and vagueness in both the conceptualisation and operationalisation of empathy, constraining the validity and usefulness of the research. The methods most commonly used to measure empathy relied heavily on self-report and cognition divorced from action, and may therefore have limited power to predict the presence or absence of empathy in clinical settings. Finally, the large majority of studies treated empathy itself as a 'black box', using global construct measurements that are unable to shed light on the underlying processes that produce an empathic response. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that future research should follow the lead of basic scientific research that conceptualises empathy as relational - an engagement between a subject and an object - rather than as a personal quality that may be modified wholesale through appropriate training.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical , Empathy , Physician-Patient Relations , Humans , Self Report
7.
J Clin Ethics ; 24(3): 253-65, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24282852

ABSTRACT

Interest in home birth appears to be growing among American women, and most obstetricians can expect to encounter patients who are considering home birth. In 2011, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) issued an opinion statement intended to guide obstetricians in responding to such patients. In this article, I examine the ACOG statement in light of the historical and contemporary clinical realities surrounding home birth in the United States, an examination guided in part by my own experiences as an obstetrician in home-birth-friendly and home-birth-unfriendly medical milieus. Comparison with other guidelines indicates that ACOG treats home birth as an ethical exception: comparable evidence leads to strikingly different recommendations in the case of home birth and the case of trial of labor following a prior cesarean; and ACOG treats other controversial issues that involve similar ethical questions quite differently. By casting the provision of information as not just the primary but the sole ethical responsibility of the obstetrician, ACOG statement obviates obstetricians' responsibilities to provide appropriate clinical care and to make the safest possible clinical environment for those mothers who choose home birth and for their newborns. What, on its face, seems to be a statement of respect for women's autonomy, implicitly authorizes behaviors that unethically restrain truly autonomous choices. Obstetricians need not attend home births, I argue. Our ethical duties do, however, oblige us (1) to refer clients to skilled clinicians who will attend home birth, (2) to continue respectful antenatal care for those women choosing home birth, (3) to provide appropriate consultation to home birth attendants, and (4) to ensure that transfers of care are smooth and nonpunitive.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior , Home Childbirth/ethics , Home Childbirth/trends , Pregnancy Outcome , Attitude of Health Personnel , Choice Behavior/ethics , Delivery, Obstetric/ethics , Delivery, Obstetric/standards , Delivery, Obstetric/statistics & numerical data , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Home Childbirth/standards , Hospitals , Humans , Midwifery , Obstetrics/ethics , Obstetrics/standards , Pregnancy , United States
8.
J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs ; 42(3): 311-20, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23600405

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To describe how nurse-midwives verbally support nulliparous women during second-stage labor and document specific details of each second stage. DESIGN: Descriptive qualitative study. SETTING: A university hospital labor and delivery unit in the southwestern United States. PARTICIPANTS: Nulliparous women (n = 14) older than age 18 and their attendant midwives (n = 9). METHODS: A single research midwife observed the entire second stage of each woman and used a standardized data collection form to record spontaneous or directed pushing, position changes, open and closed glottis pushing. A digital audio recorder was employed to capture verbal communication between the midwife and laboring woman. The research midwife and two qualitative experts employed content analysis to analyze the audio transcripts and identify categories of verbal support. RESULTS: Analysis revealed four categories of verbal support: affirmation, information sharing, direction, and baby talk. The vast majority of verbal communication by nurse-midwives consisted of affirmation and information sharing. Nurse-midwives gave direction for specific reasons. Women pushed spontaneously the majority of the time, regardless of epidural use. CONCLUSION: Nurse-midwives use a range of verbal support strategies to guide the second stage. Directive support was relatively uncommon. Most verbal support instead affirmed a woman's ability to follow her own body's lead in second-stage labor, with or without epidural.


Subject(s)
Delivery, Obstetric/nursing , Labor Stage, Second/psychology , Midwifery/methods , Nurse's Role , Nurse-Patient Relations , Verbal Behavior , Adult , Delivery, Obstetric/psychology , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Nursing Methodology Research , Pregnancy , United States , Young Adult
9.
Glob Public Health ; 8(2): 187-201, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23350930

ABSTRACT

The gender inequalities that characterise intimate partner relationships in Malawi, a country with one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world, arguably place marriage as an important risk factor for HIV infection among women, yet few studies detail the complex interactions of marriage and risk. In order to develop HIV-prevention interventions that have lasting impacts in such communities, we need a deeper understanding of the intricacies of women's lives, how and why they are involved in marital relationships, and the implications of these relationships for HIV transmission or prevention. This article describes how women understand marriage's effects on their lives and their HIV risks. Drawing from focus group discussions with 72 women attending antiretroviral clinics in Malawi, we explore why women enter marriage, what women's experiences are within marriage and how they leave spouses for other relationships. Based on their narratives, we describe women's lives after separation, abandonment or widowhood, and report their reflections on marriage after being married two or three times. We then review women's narratives in light of published work on HIV, and provide recommendations that would minimise the risks of HIV attendant on marriage.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/transmission , Marriage/trends , Sexual Behavior , Women's Health/trends , Women's Rights/trends , Adult , Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , Domestic Violence/economics , Domestic Violence/trends , Female , Feminism , Focus Groups , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV Infections/epidemiology , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Malawi/epidemiology , Marriage/psychology , Marriage/statistics & numerical data , Middle Aged , Poverty , Prevalence , Risk Factors , Women's Health/economics , Women's Rights/economics , Young Adult
10.
Am Anthropol ; 114(1): 108-22, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22662357

ABSTRACT

At an understaffed and underresourced urban African training hospital, Malawian medical students learn to be doctors while foreign medical students, visiting Malawi as clinical tourists on short-term electives, learn about "global health." Scientific ideas circulate fast there; clinical tourists circulate readily from outside to Malawi but not the reverse; medical technologies circulate slowly, erratically, and sometimes not at all. Medicine's uneven globalization is on full display. I extend scholarship on moral imaginations and medical imaginaries to propose that students map these wards variously as places in which­or from which­they seek a better medicine. Clinical tourists, enacting their own moral maps, also become representatives of medicine "out there": points on the maps of others. Ethnographic data show that for Malawians, clinical tourists are colleagues, foils against whom they construct ideas about a superior and distinctly Malawian medicine and visions of possible alternative futures for themselves.


Subject(s)
Hospitals, Teaching , Medical Tourism , Schools, Medical , Students, Medical , Students, Public Health , Technology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hospitals, Teaching/economics , Hospitals, Teaching/history , Hospitals, Teaching/legislation & jurisprudence , Malawi/ethnology , Medical Tourism/economics , Medical Tourism/history , Medical Tourism/legislation & jurisprudence , Medical Tourism/psychology , Schools, Medical/economics , Schools, Medical/history , Students, Medical/history , Students, Medical/legislation & jurisprudence , Students, Medical/psychology , Students, Public Health/history , Students, Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Students, Public Health/psychology , Technology/economics , Technology/education , Technology/history
12.
Virtual Mentor ; 12(3): 218-24, 2010 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23140872
13.
Med Anthropol Q ; 21(2): 218-33, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17601085

ABSTRACT

The philosophy of "evidence-based medicine"--basing medical decisions on evidence from randomized controlled trials and other forms of aggregate data rather than on clinical experience or expert opinion--has swept U.S. medical practice in recent years. Obstetricians justify recent increases in the use of cesarean section, and dramatic decreases in vaginal birth following previous cesarean, as evidence-based obstetrical practice. Analysis of pivotal "evidence" supporting cesarean demonstrates that the data are a product of its social milieu: The mother's body disappears from analytical view; images of fetal safety are marketing tools; technology magically wards off the unpredictability and danger of birth. These changes in practice have profound implications for maternal and child health. A feminist project within obstetrics is both feasible and urgently needed as one locus of resistance.


Subject(s)
Cesarean Section/statistics & numerical data , Evidence-Based Medicine , Mothers , Obstetrics , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Pregnancy , United States
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