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“Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda

Global health researchers often approach Traditional, Complementary, and Alternative Medicine (TCAM) from a health efficacy perspective, asking whether the presence of plural medical systems helps or hinders the uptake of biomedicine. Medical anthropologists, by contrast, typically emphasize how plu...

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Autores principales: Moore, Erin V., Ddaaki, William, Hirsch, Jennifer S., Chang, Larry, Nalugoda, Fred, Santelli, John S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8900654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35151149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114756
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author Moore, Erin V.
Ddaaki, William
Hirsch, Jennifer S.
Chang, Larry
Nalugoda, Fred
Santelli, John S.
author_facet Moore, Erin V.
Ddaaki, William
Hirsch, Jennifer S.
Chang, Larry
Nalugoda, Fred
Santelli, John S.
author_sort Moore, Erin V.
collection PubMed
description Global health researchers often approach Traditional, Complementary, and Alternative Medicine (TCAM) from a health efficacy perspective, asking whether the presence of plural medical systems helps or hinders the uptake of biomedicine. Medical anthropologists, by contrast, typically emphasize how plural medical systems encourage us to rethink health ontologies—that is, who and what comes to constitute the experience of health and illness, and through which practices. Building on both approaches, we explore the role of “healers,” a term we use to encompass several different kinds of TCAM providers, in the sexual and reproductive healthcare (SRH) of young people from southcentral Uganda, a region well known as an HIV/AIDS epicenter. Drawing from ethnographic data, we describe three reasons that young people seek SRH from healers. First, they associate stigma, scarcity, and high costs with biomedical SRH. Second, healers work across biomedical and non-biomedical therapeutic divides, prescribing herbs for sexually transmitted infections while simultaneously referring clients to biomedical HIV clinics. Third, healers provide counseling focused on pleasurable and economically-motivated sex. Because these therapies diverge from international and national HIV prevention messaging that frames non-marital and transactional sex in terms of danger and disease, healers’ holistic approach to SRH may help to reconstitute the meaning, practice, and experience of “sexual health” in contemporary Uganda. This has important implications for improving global SRH programs and for understanding the continued appeal of TCAM more generally.
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spelling pubmed-89006542022-03-07 “Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda Moore, Erin V. Ddaaki, William Hirsch, Jennifer S. Chang, Larry Nalugoda, Fred Santelli, John S. Soc Sci Med Article Global health researchers often approach Traditional, Complementary, and Alternative Medicine (TCAM) from a health efficacy perspective, asking whether the presence of plural medical systems helps or hinders the uptake of biomedicine. Medical anthropologists, by contrast, typically emphasize how plural medical systems encourage us to rethink health ontologies—that is, who and what comes to constitute the experience of health and illness, and through which practices. Building on both approaches, we explore the role of “healers,” a term we use to encompass several different kinds of TCAM providers, in the sexual and reproductive healthcare (SRH) of young people from southcentral Uganda, a region well known as an HIV/AIDS epicenter. Drawing from ethnographic data, we describe three reasons that young people seek SRH from healers. First, they associate stigma, scarcity, and high costs with biomedical SRH. Second, healers work across biomedical and non-biomedical therapeutic divides, prescribing herbs for sexually transmitted infections while simultaneously referring clients to biomedical HIV clinics. Third, healers provide counseling focused on pleasurable and economically-motivated sex. Because these therapies diverge from international and national HIV prevention messaging that frames non-marital and transactional sex in terms of danger and disease, healers’ holistic approach to SRH may help to reconstitute the meaning, practice, and experience of “sexual health” in contemporary Uganda. This has important implications for improving global SRH programs and for understanding the continued appeal of TCAM more generally. 2022-03 2022-01-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8900654/ /pubmed/35151149 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114756 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ).
spellingShingle Article
Moore, Erin V.
Ddaaki, William
Hirsch, Jennifer S.
Chang, Larry
Nalugoda, Fred
Santelli, John S.
“Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda
title “Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda
title_full “Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda
title_fullStr “Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed “Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda
title_short “Sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: Healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in Uganda
title_sort “sex is supposed to be naturally more pleasurable”: healers as providers of holistic sexual and reproductive healthcare in uganda
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8900654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35151149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114756
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