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Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania

BACKGROUND: Acceptability is a poorly conceptualized dimension of access to health care. Using a study on childhood convulsion in rural Tanzania, we examined social acceptability from a user perspective. The study design is based on the premise that a match between health providers’ and clients’ und...

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Autores principales: Dillip, Angel, Alba, Sandra, Mshana, Christopher, Hetzel, Manuel W, Lengeler, Christian, Mayumana, Iddy, Schulze, Alexander, Mshinda, Hassan, Weiss, Mitchell G, Obrist, Brigit
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3405484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22571384
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-113
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author Dillip, Angel
Alba, Sandra
Mshana, Christopher
Hetzel, Manuel W
Lengeler, Christian
Mayumana, Iddy
Schulze, Alexander
Mshinda, Hassan
Weiss, Mitchell G
Obrist, Brigit
author_facet Dillip, Angel
Alba, Sandra
Mshana, Christopher
Hetzel, Manuel W
Lengeler, Christian
Mayumana, Iddy
Schulze, Alexander
Mshinda, Hassan
Weiss, Mitchell G
Obrist, Brigit
author_sort Dillip, Angel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Acceptability is a poorly conceptualized dimension of access to health care. Using a study on childhood convulsion in rural Tanzania, we examined social acceptability from a user perspective. The study design is based on the premise that a match between health providers’ and clients’ understanding of disease is an important dimension of social acceptability, especially in trans-cultural communication, for example if childhood convulsions are not linked with malaria and local treatment practices are mostly preferred. The study was linked to health interventions with the objective of bridging the gap between local and biomedical understanding of convulsions. METHODS: The study combined classical ethnography with the cultural epidemiology approach using EMIC (Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue) tool. EMIC interviews were conducted in a 2007/08 convulsion study (n = 88) and results were compared with those of an earlier 2004/06 convulsion study (n = 135). Earlier studies on convulsion in the area were also examined to explore longer-term changes in treatment practices. RESULTS: The match between local and biomedical understanding of convulsions was already high in the 2004/06 study. Specific improvements were noted in form of (1) 46% point increase among those who reported use of mosquito nets to prevent convulsion (2) 13% point decrease among caregivers who associated convulsion with ‘evil eye and sorcery’, 3) 14% point increase in prompt use of health facility and 4)16% point decrease among those who did not use health facility at all. Such changes can be partly attributed to interventions which explicitly aimed at increasing the match between local and biomedical understanding of malaria. Caregivers, mostly mothers, did not seek advice on where to take an ill child. This indicates that treatment at health facility has become socially acceptable for severe febrile with convulsion. CONCLUSION: As an important dimension of access to health care ‘social acceptability’ seems relevant in studying illnesses that are perceived not to belong to the biomedical field, specifically in trans-cultural societies. Understanding the match between local and biomedical understanding of disease is fundamental to ensure acceptability of health care services, successful control and management of health problems. Our study noted some positive changes in community knowledge and management of convulsion episodes, changes which might be accredited to extensive health education campaigns in the study area. On the other hand it is difficult to make inference out of the findings as a result of small sample size involved. In return, it is clear that well ingrained traditional beliefs can be modified with communication campaigns, provided that this change resonates with the beneficiaries.
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spelling pubmed-34054842012-07-26 Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania Dillip, Angel Alba, Sandra Mshana, Christopher Hetzel, Manuel W Lengeler, Christian Mayumana, Iddy Schulze, Alexander Mshinda, Hassan Weiss, Mitchell G Obrist, Brigit BMC Health Serv Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Acceptability is a poorly conceptualized dimension of access to health care. Using a study on childhood convulsion in rural Tanzania, we examined social acceptability from a user perspective. The study design is based on the premise that a match between health providers’ and clients’ understanding of disease is an important dimension of social acceptability, especially in trans-cultural communication, for example if childhood convulsions are not linked with malaria and local treatment practices are mostly preferred. The study was linked to health interventions with the objective of bridging the gap between local and biomedical understanding of convulsions. METHODS: The study combined classical ethnography with the cultural epidemiology approach using EMIC (Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue) tool. EMIC interviews were conducted in a 2007/08 convulsion study (n = 88) and results were compared with those of an earlier 2004/06 convulsion study (n = 135). Earlier studies on convulsion in the area were also examined to explore longer-term changes in treatment practices. RESULTS: The match between local and biomedical understanding of convulsions was already high in the 2004/06 study. Specific improvements were noted in form of (1) 46% point increase among those who reported use of mosquito nets to prevent convulsion (2) 13% point decrease among caregivers who associated convulsion with ‘evil eye and sorcery’, 3) 14% point increase in prompt use of health facility and 4)16% point decrease among those who did not use health facility at all. Such changes can be partly attributed to interventions which explicitly aimed at increasing the match between local and biomedical understanding of malaria. Caregivers, mostly mothers, did not seek advice on where to take an ill child. This indicates that treatment at health facility has become socially acceptable for severe febrile with convulsion. CONCLUSION: As an important dimension of access to health care ‘social acceptability’ seems relevant in studying illnesses that are perceived not to belong to the biomedical field, specifically in trans-cultural societies. Understanding the match between local and biomedical understanding of disease is fundamental to ensure acceptability of health care services, successful control and management of health problems. Our study noted some positive changes in community knowledge and management of convulsion episodes, changes which might be accredited to extensive health education campaigns in the study area. On the other hand it is difficult to make inference out of the findings as a result of small sample size involved. In return, it is clear that well ingrained traditional beliefs can be modified with communication campaigns, provided that this change resonates with the beneficiaries. BioMed Central 2012-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3405484/ /pubmed/22571384 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-113 Text en Copyright ©2012 Dillip et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dillip, Angel
Alba, Sandra
Mshana, Christopher
Hetzel, Manuel W
Lengeler, Christian
Mayumana, Iddy
Schulze, Alexander
Mshinda, Hassan
Weiss, Mitchell G
Obrist, Brigit
Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania
title Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania
title_full Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania
title_fullStr Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania
title_short Acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural Tanzania
title_sort acceptability – a neglected dimension of access to health care: findings from a study on childhood convulsions in rural tanzania
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3405484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22571384
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-113
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