萨摩亚的糖尿病护理:作为护理不足的预防及其产生的知识差距。

IF 2.3 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Global Public Health Pub Date : 2025-12-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-28 DOI:10.1080/17441692.2025.2482768
Jessica Hardin, Saunima'a Ma Fulu-Aiolupotea, Tauaitala Lees, Uila Laifa Lima, Ramona Boodoosingh, Falelua Maua, Tausala Aiavao, Sophia Williams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这项研究考察了萨摩亚的糖尿病护理,提供了对全球卫生挑战的见解,在萨摩亚,大多数糖尿病患者仍未得到诊断,预防战略不足。根据民族志访谈和来自212名参与者的自由列表数据,我们确定了三个关键主题:有限的症状知识延误了护理,传统治疗师在寻求护理方面发挥作用,糖尿病通常通过以症状为中心的干预措施进行管理,而不是作为一种慢性病。这些发现突出了强调饮食和运动的预防运动如何经常排除症状识别,使家庭在分散的系统中进行护理。我们提出预防作为不够的护理来理论化策略的局限性,优先考虑行为改变,而忽视慢性病管理的关系和系统方法。我们提出了一种生命历程方法,整合症状知识,同时认识到社会、生物和环境因素的累积影响。将传统治疗师纳入正规卫生保健系统也为早期干预提供了一条符合文化的途径。这些建议与太平洋土著居民的健康模式相一致,如Fonofale和Te Vaka Atafaga,这些模式优先考虑关系护理。这些发现提出了对预防框架的全球相关批评,倡导解决知识差距和减少并发症的关系性社区驱动战略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Diabetes care in Samoa: Prevention as not-enough-care and the knowledge gaps it produces.

This study examines diabetes care in Samoa, offering insights into global health challenges where most people with diabetes remain undiagnosed and prevention strategies fall short. Drawing on ethnographic interviews and freelist data from 212 participants, we identified three key themes: limited symptom knowledge delays care, traditional healers play a role in care-seeking, and diabetes is often managed through symptom-focused interventions rather than as a chronic condition. These findings highlight how prevention campaigns emphasising diet and exercise often exclude symptom recognition, leaving families to navigate care within fragmented systems. We propose prevention as not-enough-care to theorise the limitations of strategies prioritising behaviour change while neglecting relational and systemic approaches to chronic illness management. We propose a life-course approach integrating symptom knowledge while recognising the cumulative impact of social, biological, and environmental factors. Integrating traditional healers into formal healthcare systems also offers a culturally responsive pathway for earlier intervention. These suggestions aligns with Indigenous Pacific health models, such as Fonofale and Te Vaka Atafaga, which prioritise relational care. These findings advance a globally relevant critique of prevention frameworks, advocating relational, community-driven strategies to address knowledge gaps and reduce complications.

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来源期刊
Global Public Health
Global Public Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
3.00%
发文量
120
期刊介绍: Global Public Health is an essential peer-reviewed journal that energetically engages with key public health issues that have come to the fore in the global environment — mounting inequalities between rich and poor; the globalization of trade; new patterns of travel and migration; epidemics of newly-emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases; the HIV/AIDS pandemic; the increase in chronic illnesses; escalating pressure on public health infrastructures around the world; and the growing range and scale of conflict situations, terrorist threats, environmental pressures, natural and human-made disasters.
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