Transfiguration(s) of Palliative Care The Moral Economy of End-of-Life Care in a Tanzanian Cancer Hospital

被引:0
|
作者
Buhl, Andrea [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Basel, Inst Social Anthropol, Basel, Switzerland
来源
ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ETHNOLOGIE | 2018年 / 143卷 / 01期
关键词
palliative care; cancer; Tanzania; sub-Saharan Africa; hospital ethnography; institutionalized care; ANTHROPOLOGY; INEQUALITY;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Palliative care is an internationally acknowledged concept focusing on patients with life-threatening diseases and their caregivers. It aims to meet individual physical, psychosocial and spiritual needs with a multidisciplinary 'holistic' approach. This idea, originating from Europe, is promoted globally as universal "human right to health" (WHO 2017). The article takes a closer look at the implementation of palliative care provision in a Tanzanian cancer hospital, where the number of cancer cases is constantly rising, and thus, those with a need for palliative care. In this place, concepts of global health meet local realities consisting of high numbers of advanced cases and scarcities of treatment and care. These constantly changing conditions are discussed in light of the newly introduced idea of 'transfiguration' and in relation to the concept of moral economy, as the implementation of palliative care is mainly driven by moral reasoning. The transfigurative processes evolve in different directions: On one hand, the initial idea of palliative care is intended to transfigure in-hospital caring practices. On the other, it is construed as an adaptive approach, which should fit into local hospital contexts. This article discusses the apparently opposed processes of transfiguration of and in palliative care.
引用
收藏
页码:85 / 104
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Palliative Care and the Aggressiveness of End-of-Life Care in Patients With Advanced Pancreatic Cancer
    Jang, Raymond W.
    Krzyzanowska, Monika K.
    Zimmermann, Camilla
    Taback, Nathan
    Alibhai, Shabbir M. H.
    JNCI-JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 2015, 107 (03):
  • [22] End-of-life care quality for children with cancer who receive palliative care
    Ananth, Prasanna
    Lindsay, Meghan
    Nye, Russell
    Mun, Sophia
    Feudtner, Chris
    Wolfe, Joanne
    PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER, 2022, 69 (09)
  • [23] The Effect of Specialized Palliative Care on End-of-Life Care Intensity in AYAs with Cancer
    Jewitt, Natalie
    Rapoport, Adam
    Gupta, Abha
    Srikanthan, Amirrtha
    Sutradhar, Rinku
    Luo, Jin
    Widger, Kimberley
    Wolfe, Joanne
    Earle, Craig C.
    Gupta, Sumit
    Kassam, Alisha
    JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2023, 65 (03) : 222 - 232
  • [24] End-of-life care: Improving medicare's palliative care benefits and services
    Boccuti, C
    Moon, M
    GERONTOLOGIST, 2002, 42 : 45 - 45
  • [26] End-of-life care for non-cancer palliative patients
    Johnston, W
    Cujec, A
    Damant, R
    Davison, S
    JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE CARE, 2005, 21 (03) : 212 - 212
  • [27] Hospital Variation And Temporal Trends In Palliative And End-Of-Life Care In The Icu
    DeCato, T. W.
    Engelberg, R. A.
    Downey, L.
    Nielsen, E. L.
    Treece, P. D.
    Back, A. L.
    Shannon, S. E.
    Kross, E. K.
    Curtis, J. R.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2013, 187
  • [28] Palliative, Ethics, and End-of-Life Care Issues in the Cancer Patient
    Riches, Jamie C.
    Voigt, Louis P.
    CRITICAL CARE CLINICS, 2021, 37 (01) : 105 - 115
  • [29] Hospital Variation and Temporal Trends in Palliative and End-of-Life Care in the ICU
    DeCato, Thomas W.
    Engelberg, Ruth A.
    Downey, Lois
    Nielsen, Elizabeth L.
    Treece, Patsy D.
    Back, Anthony L.
    Shannon, Sarah E.
    Kross, Erin K.
    Curtis, J. Randall
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2013, 41 (06) : 1405 - 1411
  • [30] Expressions of Moral Values in Palliative Care Patients and Their Influence on End-of-Life Decisions
    van den Broek-Altenburg, E.
    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2020, 55 : 20 - 20