多米尼加妇女腿部淋巴水肿的健康寻求行为和自我保健实践:对淋巴水肿管理方案的影响

Bobbie Person, David G Addiss, L Kay Bartholomew, Cecilia Meijer, Victor Pou, Bart van den Borne
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引用次数: 29

摘要

背景:在拥有丝虫病流行区的拉丁美洲国家多米尼加共和国,有6.3万多人患有淋巴丝虫病,40多万人面临未来感染的风险。本文旨在探讨丝虫病流行地区淋巴水肿妇女的健康观念、健康寻求行为和自我保健实践,以更好地了解妇女在制定淋巴水肿发病率控制方案时的需求。方法:通过对28名妇女的半结构化访谈、对28名妇女的3次焦点小组讨论、实地记录和照片收集定性资料。结果:妇女描述了详尽和昂贵的尝试寻求治疗他们的淋巴水肿。家庭成员在向寻求转介给土著治疗师的妇女提供初步护理方面具有影响力,这些治疗师被认为对疾病的身体、心理、精神和超自然特性具有影响力。当土著治疗被证明无效时,这些妇女向训练有素的保健提供者寻求治疗。大多数医疗保健提供者错误地诊断了水肿,未能充分治疗和满足妇女的需求,并被认为是昂贵的。大多数妇女采用自我处方注射、口服或局部抗生素以及口服镇痛药作为自我保健的标准做法。结论:医疗保健提供者必须了解妇女对疾病的文化观点,她的自然支持和转诊网络,她的寻求护理和自我护理的行为实践以及寻求护理的经济负担。在多米尼加共和国的文化中,家庭成员和传统保健提供者是对最初的求医行为和自我保健做法有影响力的顾问。因此,面向家庭的干预措施、妇女及其家庭支助小组、社区教育以及为土著治疗师提供简单、低成本的淋巴水肿管理技术培训,都是影响淋巴水肿妇女早期发现、诊断和治疗的可行方法。土著治疗师和妇女在没有医疗监督的情况下广泛使用注射、口服和局部使用抗生素,这表明需要开展与这种做法的风险有关的健康教育。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health-seeking behaviors and self-care practices of Dominican women with lymphoedema of the leg: implications for lymphoedema management programs.

Background: In the Dominican Republic, a Latin American country with filariasis-endemic areas, more than 63,000 people have lymphatic filariasis and more than 400,000 people are at risk of future infection. In this paper, we explore the health beliefs, health-seeking behaviors and self-care practices of women with lymphoedema in filariasis-endemic areas to better understand the needs of women when developing lymphoedema morbidity control programs.

Methods: Qualitative data were collected through semi-structured interviews of 28 women, 3 focus group discussions with 28 women, field notes and photographs.

Results: Women described exhaustive and expensive attempts at seeking a cure for their lymphoedema. Family members were influential in providing women with initial care seeking referrals to indigenous healers credited with influence over physical, mental, spiritual and supernatural properties of illness. When indigenous treatments proved to be ineffectual, the women sought care from trained healthcare providers. Most healthcare providers incorrectly diagnosed the edema, failed to adequately treat and meet the needs of women and were viewed as expensive. Most women resorted to self-prescribing injectable, oral, or topical antibiotics along with oral analgesics as a standard practice of self-care.

Conclusion: Healthcare providers must understand a woman's cultural perspectives of illness, her natural networks of support and referral, her behavioural practices of care-seeking and self-care and the financial burden of seeking care. In the culture of the Dominican Republic family members and traditional healthcare providers are influential advisors on initial health-seeking behaviors and self-care practices. For this reason family-oriented interventions, support groups for women and their families, community education and training on simple, low cost lymphoedema management techniques for indigenous healers are viable ways to influence the early detection, diagnosis and treatment of women with lymphoedema. The extensive use of injectable, oral and topical antibiotics by indigenous healers and women without medical supervision suggests a need for health education messages related to the risks of such practices.

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