[生殖保健做法会造成HIV、HVB和HVC传播的风险吗?柬埔寨的案例研究]。

Sante (Montrouge, France) Pub Date : 2010-01-01 Epub Date: 2010-04-06 DOI:10.1684/san.2009.0151
Pascale Hancart Petitet
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引用次数: 2

摘要

HIV、HBV和HCV医院内传播的过程尚未在全球范围内进行研究;人们对它们知之甚少,也不了解导致这种传播的潜在社会和文化逻辑。迄今为止,对医院卫生学的研究主要是从生物学角度出发的。然而,医院卫生受到规范和社会文化表征的影响,疾病传播的增加或限制总是发生在社会关系中。我们需要从文化角度分析与卫生有关的实践,特别是因为规范是根据社会和符号逻辑在地方层面上解释的。我们的论文旨在调查柬埔寨生殖保健实践背景下的这些问题。我们描述了医疗和非医疗护理人员的各种看法、态度和角色,并展示了它们如何决定实践,以及卫生、社会和制度背景如何塑造实践。自1995年以来,公共卫生机构提供了避孕方法(避孕套、口服或注射避孕药具、避孕植入物、宫内节育器和紧急避孕)。除了免费发放避孕套,特别是非政府组织作为艾滋病毒预防项目的一部分,获得避孕措施不是免费的。私人诊所以及当地和国际非政府组织提供了许多此类服务。城市和农村地区的许多妇女都向非正规部门寻求生殖保健服务,这些护理人员可能受过培训,也可能没有受过培训。因此,我们想知道,在正规和非正规护理部门实施的这些做法是否会造成艾滋病毒、HVB和HVC传播的风险。我们分析这些问题,特别是考虑注射Depo-Provera,宫内节育器的插入,阴道清洁做法,和手术流产。这项对生殖保健领域卫生的社会文化层面的调查强调了这些做法如何以及在多大程度上可能造成艾滋病毒、乙型肝炎病毒或丙型肝炎病毒在医院内传播的风险,这些做法是由在正规卫生保健环境之外执业的受过培训或未经培训的护理人员进行的。我们还想知道,在某些情况下,由公共保健部门的护理人员"非正式地"实施生殖健康做法,特别是在夜间和周末实施这些做法,是否会有风险。最后,由于在允许提供堕胎服务的机构中堕胎费用高昂,许多妇女求助于非正规护理部门,而这些部门的材料和技术以及从业人员缺乏培训似乎是出血风险和随后感染的根源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Do reproductive health care practices create a risk of HIV, HVB, and HVC transmission? Case studies in Cambodia].

The processes involved in nosocomial transmission of HIV, HBV, and HCV nosocomial transmission have not been studied at a global level; little is known about them or about the underlying social and cultural logic that contributes to this transmission. Hospital hygiene has mainly been studied from a biological perspective until now. However, hospital hygiene is shaped by norms and sociocultural representations, and the increase or limitation of disease transmission always takes place within social relations. We need to analyse the practices related to hygiene from a cultural perspective, especially since norms are interpreted at the local level according to social and symbolic logic. Our paper aims to investigate these issues in the context of reproductive health care practices in Cambodia. We describe various perceptions, attitudes and roles of both medical and non-medical caregivers and show how they determine practices, as well as how sanitary, social and institutional contexts shape practices. Since 1995, public health institutions have provided contraceptive methods (condoms, oral or injectable contraceptives, contraceptive implants, intrauterine devices, and emergency contraception). Except for the free distribution of condoms, particularly by NGOs as part of HIV prevention programs, access to contraception is not free. Private clinics and local and international NGOs provide many of these services. Many women in both urban and rural areas seek reproductive health care in the informal sector, from caregivers who may or may not be trained. We thus wonder if these practices, as implemented in the formal and informal care sectors, create a risk for the transmission of HIV, HVB, and HVC. We analyse those issues in considering especially the injection of Depo-Provera, insertion of intrauterine devices, vaginal cleaning practices, and surgical abortion. This investigation of the sociocultural dimension of hygiene in the field of reproductive health care underlines how and to what extent these practices may present a risk of nosocomial transmission of HIV, HBV, or HCV when they are performed by trained or untrained caregivers practising outside the formal health care setting. We also wonder if in some circumstances, reproductive health practices may be at risk when they are performed "informally", particularly at night and on weekends by caregivers in the public sector of care. Finally, because of the high cost of abortions in the institutions allowed to provide this service, many women have recourse to informal care sector, where the materials and techniques, as well as the lack of training for practitioners, appear to be the source of haemorrhagic risks and subsequent infection.

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