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Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele

The South African government monitors and tracks the health of newborns and the growth of children. The Department of Health (DoH) does this monitoring using the Road to Health Booklet (RtHB). In this dissertation I analyse the use of the booklet in the township of Masiphumelele in Cape Town. The st...

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Main Author: Ngcowa, Sonwabiso
Other Authors: Ross, Fiona
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of African and GenderStuds, Anth and Ling 2020
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ngcowa, Sonwabiso
author2 Ross, Fiona
author_browse Ngcowa, Sonwabiso
Ross, Fiona
author_facet Ross, Fiona
Ngcowa, Sonwabiso
author_sort Ngcowa, Sonwabiso
collection Thesis
description The South African government monitors and tracks the health of newborns and the growth of children. The Department of Health (DoH) does this monitoring using the Road to Health Booklet (RtHB). In this dissertation I analyse the use of the booklet in the township of Masiphumelele in Cape Town. The state produced booklet is intended for the child and mother as a patient-held medical health record. Liaw (1993) defines a patient-held record as notes or space provided on a document for the recording of follow up appointments for further investigation by medical doctors. The RtHB is used to record the child’s development, immunisations and HIV related information from birth to the age of twelve years. The dissertation results from ethnographic research with eight black Xhosa1 mothers and caregivers with children under the age of five years old. Mosley, and Chen, (1984), argue that in developing countries where standard child healthcare has been made available, children should survive the first five years of life. In my research, during the period of six weeks between July, August and September 2017, I followed the booklet in to Masiphumelele. From my observation and semi-structured interviews, looking at the state’s role of ‘pastoral’ care, child wellbeing and living in a township, and recording, under the theme of child wellbeing, certain concepts emerged. These concepts were state power, mothering, caring for children, responsibilisation, gender, kinship, fatherhood, child wellbeing knowledge production, social networking. In this dissertation I use ethnographic findings, accompanied by my own personal narratives. I argue that tracking child wellbeing through this booklet, the state exercises what Foucault (1982) referred to as ‘pastoral power’ in ensuring the wellbeing of the populations.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:43.046Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher School of African and GenderStuds, Anth and Ling
publisherStr School of African and GenderStuds, Anth and Ling
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30889 Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele Ngcowa, Sonwabiso Ross, Fiona road to health booklet state pastoral power governmentality wellbeing The South African government monitors and tracks the health of newborns and the growth of children. The Department of Health (DoH) does this monitoring using the Road to Health Booklet (RtHB). In this dissertation I analyse the use of the booklet in the township of Masiphumelele in Cape Town. The state produced booklet is intended for the child and mother as a patient-held medical health record. Liaw (1993) defines a patient-held record as notes or space provided on a document for the recording of follow up appointments for further investigation by medical doctors. The RtHB is used to record the child’s development, immunisations and HIV related information from birth to the age of twelve years. The dissertation results from ethnographic research with eight black Xhosa1 mothers and caregivers with children under the age of five years old. Mosley, and Chen, (1984), argue that in developing countries where standard child healthcare has been made available, children should survive the first five years of life. In my research, during the period of six weeks between July, August and September 2017, I followed the booklet in to Masiphumelele. From my observation and semi-structured interviews, looking at the state’s role of ‘pastoral’ care, child wellbeing and living in a township, and recording, under the theme of child wellbeing, certain concepts emerged. These concepts were state power, mothering, caring for children, responsibilisation, gender, kinship, fatherhood, child wellbeing knowledge production, social networking. In this dissertation I use ethnographic findings, accompanied by my own personal narratives. I argue that tracking child wellbeing through this booklet, the state exercises what Foucault (1982) referred to as ‘pastoral power’ in ensuring the wellbeing of the populations. 2020-02-06T12:06:09Z 2020-02-06T12:06:09Z 2019 2020-02-04T06:53:33Z Master Thesis Masters MSocSci http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30889 eng application/pdf School of African and GenderStuds, Anth and Ling Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle road to health booklet
state
pastoral power
governmentality
wellbeing
Ngcowa, Sonwabiso
Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele
title_full Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele
title_fullStr Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele
title_full_unstemmed Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele
title_short Infant wellbeing and monitoring: An observation of the Road to Health Booklet in Masiphumelele
title_sort infant wellbeing and monitoring an observation of the road to health booklet in masiphumelele
topic road to health booklet
state
pastoral power
governmentality
wellbeing
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30889
work_keys_str_mv AT ngcowasonwabiso infantwellbeingandmonitoringanobservationoftheroadtohealthbookletinmasiphumelele