Legacy, Legitimacy, and Possibility: An Exploration of Community Health Worker Experience across the Generations in Khayelitsha, South Africa

被引:19
|
作者
Swartz, Alison [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cape Town, Sch Publ Hlth & Family Med, ZA-7700 Rondebosch, South Africa
关键词
care; community health work; generational differences; ubuntu; South Africa;
D O I
10.1111/maq.12020
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
In South Africa, the response to HIV and TB epidemics is complex, varied, and contextually defined. Task-shifting and a movement toward a decentralized model of care have led to an increased reliance on community health workers (CHWs) providing health care services to residents of impoverished, peri-urban areas. Public health policy tends to present CHWs as a homogeneous group, with little attention paid to the nuances of experience, motivation, and understanding, which distinguish these care workers from one another and from other kinds of health workers. An exploration of the layered meanings of providing community health care services under financially, politically, and socially difficult conditions reveals clear distinctions of experience across the generations. Many older CHWs say that ubuntu, a notion of shared African humanity, is being killed off by the younger generation, whereas younger CHWs often describe older women as being jealous of the opportunities that this younger generation has for education, training, and employment. The structure of the South African health system, past and present responses to disease epidemics, and the legacy of apartheid's structural violence have amplified these generational differences among CHWs. Using ethnographic data collected from approximately 20 CHWS in a peri-urban settlement in Cape Town, South Africa, I explore how CHWs experience and understand legitimacy in the moral economy of care. A call for closer attention to the experiences of CHWs is critical when designing public health policies for the delivery of health care services in impoverished communities in South Africa.
引用
收藏
页码:139 / 154
页数:16
相关论文
共 20 条
  • [1] Unintended Consequences of Community Health Worker Programs in South Africa
    van de Ruit, Catherine
    QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH, 2019, 29 (11) : 1535 - 1548
  • [2] Are we listening to community health workers? Experiences of the community health worker journey in rural South Africa
    Stansert Katzen, Linnea
    Skeen, Sarah
    Dippenaar, Elaine
    Laurenzi, Christina
    Notholi, Vuyolwethu
    le Roux, Karl
    Rotheram-Borus, Mary Jane
    le Roux, Ingrid
    Mbewu, Nokwanele
    Tomlinson, Mark
    RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH, 2022, 45 (03) : 380 - 389
  • [3] The emergence of community health worker programmes in the late apartheid era in South Africa: An historical analysis
    van Ginneken, Nadja
    Lewin, Simon
    Berridge, Virginia
    SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2010, 71 (06) : 1110 - 1118
  • [4] Effectiveness of a large-scale, sustained and comprehensive community health worker program in improving population health: the experience of an urban health district in South Africa
    Thomas, L. S.
    Buch, E.
    Pillay, Y.
    Jordaan, J.
    HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH, 2021, 19 (01)
  • [5] "The Videos Gave Weight to Our Work": Animated mHealth Videos and Tablet Technology Boost Community Health Workers' Perceived Credibility in Khayelitsha, South Africa
    Adam, Maya
    Job, Nophiwe
    Mabaso, Bongekile
    Barnighausen, Till
    Kuhnert, Kira-Leigh
    Johnston, Jamie
    Mqungwana, Neliswa
    Le Roux, Ingrid
    Mbewu, Nokwanele
    Gates, Jennifer
    Scott, Kerry
    Vandormael, Alain
    Greuel, Merlin
    Prober, Charles
    McMahon, Shannon A.
    QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH, 2022, 32 (8-9) : 1273 - 1284
  • [6] Outreach services to improve access to health care in South Africa: lessons from three community health worker programmes
    Nxumalo, Nonhlanhla
    Goudge, Jane
    Thomas, Liz
    GLOBAL HEALTH ACTION, 2013, 6 : 219 - 226
  • [7] The role of a community health worker-delivered preconception and pregnancy intervention in achieving a more positive pregnancy experience: the Bukhali trial in Soweto, South Africa
    Soepnel, Larske M.
    Mabetha, Khuthala
    Norris, Shane A.
    Motlhatlhedi, Molebogeng
    Nkosi, Nokuthula
    Klingberg, Sonja
    Lye, Stephen
    Draper, Catherine E.
    BMC WOMENS HEALTH, 2024, 24 (01)
  • [8] Supportive supervision from a roving nurse mentor in a community health worker programme: a process evaluation in South Africa
    Malatji, Hlologelo
    Griffiths, Frances
    Goudge, Jane
    BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2022, 22 (01)
  • [9] Supportive supervision from a roving nurse mentor in a community health worker programme: a process evaluation in South Africa
    Hlologelo Malatji
    Frances Griffiths
    Jane Goudge
    BMC Health Services Research, 22
  • [10] Leadership and governance of community health worker programmes at scale: a cross case analysis of provincial implementation in South Africa
    Schneider, Helen
    Nxumalo, Nonhlanhla
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH, 2017, 16